Litcius/Paper detail

Mechanical memory based on chromatin and metabolism remodeling promotes proliferation and smooth muscle differentiation in mesenchymal stem cells

Jing Na, Qiusheng Shi, Zhijie Yang, Yu Liu, Xinyuan Chen, Ziyi Wang, Lisha Zheng, Yubo Fan

2024The FASEB Journal12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Stem cells respond and remember mechanical cues from the microenvironment, which modulates their therapeutic effects. Chromatin organization and energy metabolism regulate the stem cell fate induced by mechanical cues. However, the mechanism of mechanical memory is still unclear. This study aimed to investigate the effects of mechanical amplitude, frequency, duration, and stretch cycle on mechanical memory in mesenchymal stem cells. It showed that the amplitude was the dominant parameter to the persistence of cell alignment. F-actin, paxillin, and nuclear deformation are more prone to be remolded than cell alignment. Stretching induces transcriptional memory, resulting in greater transcription upon subsequent reloading. Cell metabolism displays mechanical memory with sustained mitochondrial fusion and increased ATP production. The mechanical memory of chromatin condensation is mediated by histone H3 lysine 27 trimethylation, leading to much higher smooth muscle differentiation efficiency. Interestingly, mechanical memory can be transmitted based on direct cell-cell interaction, and stretched cells can remodel the metabolic homeostasis of static cells. Our results provide insight into the underlying mechanism of mechanical memory and its potential benefits for stem cell therapy.

Topics & Concepts

Cell biologyMesenchymal stem cellStem cellChromatinMechanotransductionBiologyChromatin remodelingChemistryBiochemistryDNACellular Mechanics and InteractionsPluripotent Stem Cells Research3D Printing in Biomedical Research