Litcius/Paper detail

Kindlin-2 Mediates Mechanical Activation of Cardiac Myofibroblasts

Elena Godbout, Dong Ok Son, Stephanie Hume, Stellar Boo, Vincent Sarrazy, Sophie Clément, András Kapùs, Bernhard Wehrle‐Haller, Leena Bruckner‐Tuderman, Cristina Has, Boris Hinz

2020Cells24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We identify the focal adhesion protein kindlin-2 as player in a novel mechanotransduction pathway that controls profibrotic cardiac fibroblast to myofibroblast activation. Kindlin-2 is co-upregulated with the myofibroblast marker α-smooth muscle actin (α-SMA) in fibrotic rat hearts and in human cardiac fibroblasts exposed to fibrosis-stiff culture substrates and pro-fibrotic TGF-β1. Stressing fibroblasts using ferromagnetic microbeads, stretchable silicone membranes, and cell contraction agonists all result in kindlin-2 translocation to the nucleus. Overexpression of full-length kindlin-2 but not of kindlin-2 missing a putative nuclear localization sequence (∆NLS kindlin-2) results in increased α-SMA promoter activity. Downregulating kindlin-2 with siRNA leads to decreased myofibroblast contraction and reduced α-SMA expression, which is dependent on CC(A/T)-rich GG(CArG) box elements in the α-SMA promoter. Lost myofibroblast features under kindlin-2 knockdown are rescued with wild-type but not ∆NLS kindlin-2, indicating that myofibroblast control by kindlin-2 requires its nuclear translocation. Because kindlin-2 can act as a mechanotransducer regulating the transcription of α-SMA, it is a potential target to interfere with myofibroblast activation in tissue fibrosis.

Topics & Concepts

MyofibroblastCell biologyCardiac fibrosisFibroblastMechanotransductionGene knockdownMyocardinFocal adhesionFibrosisActinDownregulation and upregulationTranscription factorChemistryBiologySignal transductionCell cultureSerum response factorMedicinePathologyGeneGeneticsCellular Mechanics and InteractionsCell Adhesion Molecules ResearchSkin and Cellular Biology Research
Kindlin-2 Mediates Mechanical Activation of Cardiac Myofibroblasts | Litcius