| Literature DB >> 35563692 |
Harikrishnan Venugopal1, Anis Hanna1, Claudio Humeres1, Nikolaos G Frangogiannis1.
Abstract
The adult mammalian heart contains abundant interstitial and perivascular fibroblasts that expand following injury and play a reparative role but also contribute to maladaptive fibrotic remodeling. Following myocardial infarction, cardiac fibroblasts undergo dynamic phenotypic transitions, contributing to the regulation of inflammatory, reparative, and angiogenic responses. This review manuscript discusses the mechanisms of regulation, roles and fate of fibroblasts in the infarcted heart. During the inflammatory phase of infarct healing, the release of alarmins by necrotic cells promotes a pro-inflammatory and matrix-degrading fibroblast phenotype that may contribute to leukocyte recruitment. The clearance of dead cells and matrix debris from the infarct stimulates anti-inflammatory pathways and activates transforming growth factor (TGF)-β cascades, resulting in the conversion of fibroblasts to α-smooth muscle actin (α-SMA)-expressing myofibroblasts. Activated myofibroblasts secrete large amounts of matrix proteins and form a collagen-based scar that protects the infarcted ventricle from catastrophic complications, such as cardiac rupture. Moreover, infarct fibroblasts may also contribute to cardiac repair by stimulating angiogenesis. During scar maturation, fibroblasts disassemble α-SMA+ stress fibers and convert to specialized cells that may serve in scar maintenance. The prolonged activation of fibroblasts and myofibroblasts in the infarct border zone and in the remote remodeling myocardium may contribute to adverse remodeling and to the pathogenesis of heart failure. In addition to their phenotypic plasticity, fibroblasts exhibit remarkable heterogeneity. Subsets with distinct phenotypic profiles may be responsible for the wide range of functions of fibroblast populations in infarcted and remodeling hearts.Entities:
Keywords: angiogenesis; cytokine; extracellular matrix; fibroblast; fibrosis; myocardial infarction; myofibroblast; remodeling
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35563692 PMCID: PMC9102016 DOI: 10.3390/cells11091386
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 7.666
Figure 1Phenotypic transitions of cardiac fibroblasts in the infarcted myocardium. During the inflammatory phase of infarct healing, necrotic cardiomyocytes release damage-associated molecular patterns that activate a pro-inflammatory, matrix-degrading phenotype in cardiac fibroblasts and contribute to the recruitment of leukocytes to the injury site. The clearance of dead cardiomyocytes stimulates anti-inflammatory signals, leading to the transition to the proliferative phase of infarct healing. During the proliferative phase of infarct healing, resident cardiac fibroblasts proliferate and undergo myofibroblast conversion, incorporating α-smooth muscle actin (α-SMA) into cytoskeletal stress fibers. Myofibroblasts are the main matrix-synthetic cells in the infarcted heart and produce both structural and matricellular extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins. During scar maturation, fibroblasts exhibit the disassembly of stress fibers and transition to matrifibrocytes, specialized cells that may play a role in scar maintenance.
Figure 2The matrix-degrading properties of fibroblasts in the infarcted myocardium. During the inflammatory phase of infarct healing, pro-inflammatory cytokines, such as interleukin (IL)-1β, tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α, and IL-6 stimulate the expression and secretion of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) that degrade the extracellular matrix, setting the stage for the replacement of damaged tissue with a collagen-based scar. During the inflammatory and early proliferative phases of infarct healing, the induction of membrane-type matrix metalloproteinases (MT-MMPs) on the cell surface plays an important role in fibroblast migration, thus localizing the reparative fibroblasts to the area of infarction.
Figure 3Dynamics of fibroblast activation during the proliferative and maturation phases of infarct healing. During the inflammatory phase of infarct healing, resident cardiac fibroblasts (identified as PDGFRα+ cells in PDGFRαEGFP reporter mice) do not express the myofibroblast marker a-smooth muscle actin (α-SMA). During the proliferative phase (3–14 days), many fibroblasts become activated, proliferate, and differentiate into cardiac myofibroblasts (PDGFRα+/α-SMA+) that secrete large amounts of extracellular matrix proteins. During the maturation phase of infarct healing (14 days–2 months), myofibroblasts disassemble the α-SMA+ stress fibers and convert to matrifibrocytes, specialized cells expressing bone-cartilage proteins, such as cartilage oligomeric matrix protein (COMP).
Effects of pro-inflammatory cytokines on cardiac fibroblasts.
| Cytokine/Species | Effect | Mechanism | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| IL-6/rat cardiac fibroblasts | IL-6 enhances collagen synthesis and myofibroblast formation. | IL-6 binds to gp130, leading to the phosphorylation of Janus kinase, activating cellular events. | [ |
| IL-6/mouse cardiac fibroblasts | IL-6 promotes myofibroblast differentiation and the release of proinflammatory cytokines in culture. In vivo, treatment with an anti-IL-6 blocking antibody reduced myofibroblast infiltration in the infarct (and also attenuated neutrophil infiltration) but also increased the size of the infarct. | IL-6-induced phosphorylation of STAT3 upregulates the expression of hyaluronan synthesis that supports a myofibroblast phenotype in cultured fibroblasts. | [ |
| IL-6/mouse cardiac fibroblasts | IL-6 promotes fibroblast activation and collagen synthesis. | In a co-culture model, macrophages stimulate cardiac fibroblasts to produce IL-6, which promotes TGF-β production and the downstream activation of Smad3 in fibroblasts. | [ |
| IL-6/neonatal rat ventricular fibroblasts | IL-6 stimulates fibroblast proliferation and myofibroblast differentiation under hypoxia. Inhibition of IL-6 signaling with an IL-6 receptor inhibitor attenuates hypoxia-induced fibroblast proliferation and differentiation and collagen I expression. | In cultured fibroblasts exposed to hypoxia, the effects of IL-6 are attributed to the activation of TGFβ1, MMP2, and MMP9. | [ |
| IL-6/human cardiac fibroblasts | IL-6 in endothelial cell-derived conditioned media increases collagen type I and fibronectin gene expression in cardiac fibroblasts. The addition of soluble gp130 to endothelial cell-derived conditioned media prevents IL-6-dependent collagen type I and fibronectin gene expression. | IL-6 in conditioned media from endothelial cells binds to soluble IL-6R to induce trans-IL-6 signaling in cardiac fibroblasts. | [ |
| IL-6/rat cardiac fibroblasts | In contrast to the promigratory effects of IL-1β and TNF-α, IL-6 has no effect on fibroblast migration. | IL-6 does not stimulate the activation of mitogen-activated protein kinases that are involved in the regulation of cell migration. | [ |
| IL-6/adult mouse ventricular fibroblasts. | IL-6 increases fibroblast adhesion and proliferation. | Cardiomyocyte-derived IL-6 acts in a paracrine manner to promote fibroblast proliferation in a cardiomyocyte/fibroblast co-culture model. | [ |
| IL-6/neonatal mouse cardiac fibroblasts | IL-6 loss decreases fibroblast-myocyte adhesion in vitro and markedly upregulates fibroblast proliferation. | In a fibroblast/cardiomyocyte coculture system, IL-6/soluble IL-6R trans-signaling activates STAT3 in fibroblasts to modulate fibroblast proliferation and adhesion to cardiomyocytes. | [ |
| IL1-β/mouse cardiac fibroblasts | IL1-β: (a) attenuates TGF-β-induced α-SMA expression and incorporation into stress fibers, (b) abrogates fibroblast-mediated collagen pad contraction and expression of periostin, and (c) promotes a matrix-degrading phenotype via stimulating MMP3 and MMP8 expression. | IL1-β acts via IL-1R1 to upregulate BAMBI, which acts to negatively regulate TGFβ signaling. IL1-β also downregulates endoglin signaling receptors. | [ |
| IL1-β/adult rat cardiac fibroblasts | IL1-β augments the expression and activity of MMP-2, 3, and 9, alongside an increase in TIMP-1 expression, and enhances fibroblast migration. | IL1-β activates p38, ERK, and JNK MAP kinase pathways to stimulate MMP expression and migration. | [ |
| IL-1β/neonatal and adult rat cardiac fibroblasts | IL1-β selectively downregulates the expression and synthesis of fibrillar collagens. Increases total MMP activity, with an increase in the expression of MMP-2, 9, and 13. | No mechanism is studied. | [ |
| IL-1β/mouse cardiac fibroblasts | IL-1β stimulates proinflammatory gene expression. It promotes ECM remodeling. | IL-1β acts via IL-R1 to promote ECM remodeling via enhancing the fibroblast expression of MMPs (MMP-3, 8, and 9) and downregulating the expression of TIMP-2 and TIMP-4. | [ |
| IL-1β/neonatal rat cardiac fibroblasts | IL-1β induces AT1 receptor upregulation in fibroblasts, contributing to ECM remodeling. | IL-1β acts via an NFκB-dependent mechanism to upregulate AT1R expression. | [ |
| IL-1α/mouse neonatal ventricular fibroblasts | IL-1R antagonism and the administration of an anti-IL-1α blocking antibody show that the conditioned medium of necrotic cardiomyocytes activates proinflammatory signaling in fibroblasts through IL-1α. | IL-1α acts via an MyD88-dependent and NLRP3-independent pathway to promote pro-inflammatory gene expression in cardiac fibroblasts. | [ |
| IL-1α/human cardiac fibroblasts | IL-1α markedly increases the expression of MMP-1, 3, 9, and 10, with a minimal effect on the mRNA expression of structural ECM proteins, and reduces the expression of ADAMTS1. | IL-1α acts via distinct P38 MAPK subtypes α/β/γ/δ to regulate the expression of MMPs and metalloproteinases in fibroblasts. | [ |
| IL-1α/human cardiac fibroblasts | IL-1α stimulates proinflammatory gene expression in fibroblasts via upregulation of IL-1β, TNF-α, and IL-6. | ERK, JNK, and p38 MAPKs, along with nuclear factor (NF)-kB signaling, distinctly regulates IL1-β, TNF-α, and IL-6 expression. | [ |
| IL-1α/human cardiac fibroblasts | Cardiac fibroblasts express neutrophil-binding adhesion molecules and neutrophil chemoattractants in response to IL-1α, promoting neutrophil recruitment into the infarcted myocardium. | IL-1α acts via a p38- and NF-κB-dependent mechanism to promote the expression of ICAM-1, E-selectin, and CXC chemokines in fibroblasts. | [ |
| IL-1α/human cardiac fibroblasts | IL-1α has opposing effects on the expression of connective tissue growth factor (CTGF) and tenascin-C (TNC) expression. | Stimulates NFκB, PI3K/AKT, and p38 MAPK pathways to upregulate the expression of TNC while downregulating CTGF expression. | [ |
| TNF-α/neonatal and adult rat cardiac fibroblasts | TNF-α promotes matrix degradation via mediating a decrease in collagen synthesis with an increase in MMP-2, MMP-9, and MMP-13. It has no effect on cell proliferation and total protein synthesis. | No mechanism studied. | [ |
| TNF-α/neonatal rat cardiac fibroblasts | TNF-α increases AT1 receptor density in cardiac fibroblasts. | TNF-α acts via NFκB to increase AT1 receptor expression. | [ |
| TNF-α/primary human fibroblasts from patient biopsies with dilated cardiomyopathy | (a) TNF-α increases cytokine expression at the transcriptome level; however, this increase was not reflected in the cytokine secretome. (b) TNF-α treatment has no effect on collagen/MMP/TIMP gene expression. | TNF-α effects are mediated via the transcriptional activation of NFκB. | [ |
| TNF-α/rat cardiac fibroblasts | TNF-α stimulates a concentration-dependent increase in fibroblast migration. | TNF-α-dependent migration is regulated by the activation of MAPKs–ERK1/2, JNK, and p38. | [ |
| TNF-α/human cardiac fibroblasts | TNF-α promotes fibroblast MMP-9 expression that is abrogated following treatment with an anti-TNF-α blocking antibody. | TNF-α acts via NFκB to promote the expression of MMP-9. | [ |
| TNF-α/human cardiac fibroblasts | TNF-α promotes the proliferation of cardiac fibroblasts. | TNF-α-dependent activation of ERK1/2 and NFκB drives fibroblast cell proliferation. | [ |
Studies documenting fibroblast-mediated signaling in repair and remodeling of the infarcted heart using fibroblast-specific targeting approaches.
| Mediator | Fibroblast-Specific Approach | Role in Repair and Remodeling of the Infarcted Heart | Role in Modulation of Fibroblast Phenotype | Proposed Mechanism | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IL1-R1 | Tamoxifen-inducible Col1a2 CreERT mice were used for fibroblast- specific deletion of IL1-R1. | Fibroblast-specific IL1-R1 drives adverse cardiac remodeling and promotes ventricular wall thinning and collagen deposition in a model of non-reperfused infarction. | IL1-R1 promotes a pro-fibrotic and matrix-degrading phenotype in fibroblasts. | IL1-α interacts with IL1-R1 to activate p38 and NFκB signaling, leading to increased expression of IL6, MMP3, and MMP9 and secretion of IL-6 and MMP-3. | [ |
| Smad3 | Myofibroblast-specific deletion used Postn-Cre mice. | Myofibroblast-specific Smad3 protects from cardiac rupture in the non-reperfused infarction model and attenuates chamber dilation. | Smad3 limits fibroblast proliferation and promotes collagen synthesis. It also mediates the formation of organized myofibroblast arrays. | Smad3 regulates fibroblast function via integrin-mediated NOX-2 expression. Moreover, Smad3-dependent activation of the GTPase RhoA dictates fibroblast alignment via the regulation of cell polarity pathways. | [ |
| Smad7 | Postn-Cre mice were used for myofibroblast-specific knockout of Smad7. | Myofibroblast Smad7 protects the infarcted heart from adverse remodeling and from heart failure-related death. Smad7 limits post-infarction fibrosis in the border zone and in the papillary muscles. | Smad7 attenuates myofibroblast activation and the synthesis of structural and matricellular ECM proteins. | Smad7 inhibits the TGFβ response via the inactivation of Smad2/3. Smad7 also binds to ErbB2 and restrains the activation of ErbB1/2 in a TGF-β-independent manner to suppress the expression of fibrogenic genes. | [ |
| GSK3β | Postn-Cre mice and tamoxifen-inducible Col1a2-Cre mice were used for deletion in myofibroblasts and fibroblasts, respectively. | Myofibroblast-specific GSK3β negatively regulates fibrosis to limit adverse ventricular remodeling in the infarcted heart. | GSK3β functions to suppress myofibroblast activation and pro-fibrotic signaling. | GSK3β inhibits TGF-β-dependent Smad3 transcriptional activation to limit fibrogenic signaling. | [ |
| P38α | TCF-21 or Postn-MCM mouse models were used to generate fibroblast and myofibroblast-specific p38α KO mice. | P38α-dependent signaling in fibroblasts drives fibrosis to promote adverse post-infarction remodeling. | P38 mediates cardiac fibroblast activation. | P38 transduces mechanical and cytokine signals via serum response factor and calcineurin to promote myofibroblast differentiation. | [ |
| GRK2 | Myofibroblast-specific GRK2 deletion was achieved using Postn-MCM mice. | GRK2 signaling contributes to pathological cardiac remodeling via promoting fibrosis and infarct expansion, leading to cardiac dysfunction. | GRK2 promotes myofibroblast activation and collagen deposition in vivo. | GRK2 interacts with Gβγ, promoting the downregulation of fibroblast β-adrenergic receptors. This decreases downstream cAMP production, resulting in the activation of pro-fibrotic signals. | [ |
| Lats1/2 | Tcf21-MCM mice were used for fibroblast-specific Lats1/2 deletion. | Lats1/2 limit pro-fibrotic signaling. | Lats1/2 maintain the resting fibroblast phenotype and prevents activation to myofibroblast. | Lats1/2 act to maintain the quiescent fibroblast cell state via inhibiting the YAP-induced activation of pro-fibrogenic genes. | [ |
| YAP | Tcf21-MCM and Col1a1 CreERT mice were used for YAP deletion in fibroblasts. | YAP promotes post-infarction fibrosis. | YAP activation in fibroblasts promotes myofibroblast proliferation and differentiation and ECM gene expression. | YAP activation induces MRTF-A expression to facilitate myofibroblast differentiation and profibrotic gene expression. | [ |
| 5-HT2B | Tcf21-MCM and Postn-MCM were used to delete 5-HT2B in resting and activated fibroblasts, respectively. | 5-HT2B expression directly contributes to excessive scar formation, leading to adverse cardiac remodeling and impaired cardiac function post-MI. | 5-HT2B promotes fibroblast proliferation and migration and the expression of ECM remodeling genes. | 5-HT2B-dependent fibroblast responses are mediated via Dnajb4 expression and Src phosphorylation. | [ |
| Hsp47 | Postn-MCM mice were used for the generation of myofibroblast-specific Hsp47 KO mice. | Hsp47 expression in myofibroblasts mediates scar formation post-MI. | HSP47 promotes fibroblast proliferation and mediates the expression of collagens without affecting the expression of α-SMA. | HSP47 enhances the expression of Snail and Zeb1 to transcriptionally activate ECM-related genes. It also downregulates the expression of cell cycle inhibitory kinases to facilitate cell proliferation. | [ |
| Sox9 | Postn-MCM mice were used for myofibroblast-specific KO. | Myofibroblast-specific Sox9 facilitates MI-induced left ventricular dysfunction, inflammation, and tissue scarring. | Sox9 activity promotes fibroblast activation, proliferation, migration, and contractile function. | Sox9 up-regulates ECM-related gene synthesis, inflammation, and proteolysis. | [ |
| AMPKα1 | Postn-Cre was used for the deletion of AMPKα1 in myofibroblasts. | AMPKα1 activation in myofibroblasts limits adverse post-infarction remodeling post-MI. | Myofibroblast-specific AMPKα1 inhibits fibroblast proliferation in response to injury. | AMPKα1 inhibits fibroblast activation and proliferation via the miR-125b-5p-dependent silencing of connexin-43. | [ |
| Muscleblind-like1 (MBNL1) | Tcf21-MCM was used for the fibroblast-specific deletion and overexpression of MBNL1. Postn-MCM was used for the deletion of MBNL1 in activated fibroblasts. | Myofibroblast-specific MBNL1 facilitates the acute wound-healing response post-MI and promotes tissue fibrosis. | MBNL1 promotes myofibroblast transition and contractile function in fibroblasts. | The RNA-binding protein MBNL1 binds to and stabilizes mRNA encoding CnAβ and SRF, promoting myofibroblast differentiation and profibrotic gene expression. | [ |
| Fibronectin | Tcf21-MCM was used for the ablation of fibronectin in fibroblasts. | Fibronectin polymerization facilitates adverse cardiac remodeling and fibrosis post I/R injury. | Polymerized FN promotes fibroblast proliferation and migration and collagen matrix deposition. | Fibronectin activates c-myc signaling, leading to integrin β1 activation and the downstream phosphorylation of FAK. | [ |