4.6 Article

Elevated BMP and Mechanical Signaling Through YAP1/RhoA Poises FOP Mesenchymal Progenitors for Osteogenesis

期刊

JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH
卷 34, 期 10, 页码 1894-1909

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jbmr.3760

关键词

FIBRODYSPLASIA OSSIFICANS PROGRESSIVA; MECHANOTRANSDUCTION; BMP SIGNALING; ACVR1; YAP1; RHOA; CELLULAR CONTRACTILITY

资金

  1. NIAMS Building Interdisciplinary Research Teams (BIRT) Award from the National Institutes of Health [3R01-AR041916-15S1]
  2. NIH [R01-AR071399, R01-EB008722]
  3. International Fibrodysplasia Ossificans Progressiva Association (IFOPA)
  4. Center for Research in FOP and Related Disorders
  5. Ian Cali Endowment for FOP Research
  6. Whitney Weldon Endowment for FOP Research
  7. Cali-Weldon Professorship of FOP Research
  8. NIAMS F31 Individual Training Grant [F31 AR069982]
  9. Center for Engineering Mechanobiology (National Science Foundation) [CMMI-1548571]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva (FOP) is a rare genetic disease characterized by the formation of extraskeletal bone, or heterotopic ossification (HO), in soft connective tissues such as skeletal muscle. All familial and sporadic cases with a classic clinical presentation of FOP carry a gain-of-function mutation (R206H; c.617 G > A) in ACVR1, a cell surface receptor that mediates bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) signaling. The BMP signaling pathway is recognized for its chondro/osteogenic-induction potential, and HO in FOP patients forms ectopic but qualitatively normal endochondral bone tissue through misdirected cell fate decisions by tissue-resident mesenchymal stem cells. In addition to biochemical ligand-receptor signaling, mechanical cues from the physical environment are transduced to activate intracellular signaling, a process known as mechanotransduction, and can influence cell fates. Utilizing an established mesenchymal stem cell model of mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) from the Acvr1(R206H/+) mouse model that mimics the human disease, we demonstrated that activation of the mechanotransductive effectors Rho/ROCK and YAP1 are increased in Acvr1(R206H/+) cells. We show that on softer substrates, a condition associated with low mechanical signaling, the morphology of Acvr1(R206H/+) cells is similar to the morphology of control Acvr1(+/+) cells on stiffer substrates, a condition that activates mechanotransduction. We further determined that Acvr1(R206H/+) cells are poised for osteogenic differentiation, expressing increased levels of chondro/osteogenic markers compared with Acvr1(+/+) cells. We also identified increased YAP1 nuclear localization in Acvr1(R206H/+) cells, which can be rescued by either BMP inhibition or Rho antagonism. Our results establish RhoA and YAP1 signaling as modulators of mechanotransduction in FOP and suggest that aberrant mechanical signals, combined with and as a result of the increased BMP pathway signaling through mutant ACVR1, lead to misinterpretation of the cellular microenvironment and a heightened sensitivity to mechanical stimuli that promotes commitment of Acvr1(R206H/+) progenitor cells to chondro/osteogenic lineages.

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