| Literature DB >> 31774304 |
Sumati Ram-Mohan1, Yan Bai2, Niccole Schaible1, Allen J Ehrlicher3, Daniel P Cook4, Bela Suki5, David A Stoltz4, Julian Solway6, Xingbin Ai2, Ramaswamy Krishnan1.
Abstract
In asthma, acute bronchospasm is driven by contractile forces of airway smooth muscle (ASM). These forces can be imaged in the cultured ASM cell or assessed in the muscle strip and the tracheal/bronchial ring, but in each case, the ASM is studied in isolation from the native airway milieu. Here, we introduce a novel platform called tissue traction microscopy (TTM) to measure ASM contractile force within porcine and human precision-cut lung slices (PCLS). Compared with the conventional measurements of lumen area changes in PCLS, TTM measurements of ASM force changes are 1) more sensitive to bronchoconstrictor stimuli, 2) less variable across airways, and 3) provide spatial information. Notably, within every human airway, TTM measurements revealed local regions of high ASM contraction that we call "stress hotspots". As an acute response to cyclic stretch, these hotspots promptly decreased but eventually recovered in magnitude, spatial location, and orientation, consistent with local ASM fluidization and resolidification. By enabling direct and precise measurements of ASM force, TTM should accelerate preclinical studies of airway reactivity.Entities:
Keywords: ASM; airway; contraction; stretch
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31774304 PMCID: PMC7052683 DOI: 10.1152/ajplung.00297.2019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol ISSN: 1040-0605 Impact factor: 5.464