TY - JOUR T1 - Mechanical stretch sustains myofibroblast phenotype and function in microtissues through latent TGF-β1 activation JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/2020.01.25.917179 SP - 2020.01.25.917179 AU - Matthew Walker AU - Michel Godin AU - Andrew E. Pelling Y1 - 2020/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2020/01/26/2020.01.25.917179.abstract N2 - Fibrosis is a leading cause of death in developed countries that is characterized by a progressive deterioration of tissue mechanical behavior. Developing methods to study tissue mechanics and myofibroblast activation may lead to new targets for therapeutic treatments that are urgently needed. Microtissue arrays are a promising approach to conduct relatively high throughput research into fibrosis as they recapitulate key biomechanical aspects of the disease through a relevant 3D extracellular environment. In early work, our group developed a device called the MVAS-force to stretch microtissues while enabling simultaneous assessment of their dynamic mechanical behavior. Here we investigated TGF-β1 induced fibroblast to myofibroblast differentiation in microtissue cultures using our MVAS-force device through assessing α-SMA expression, contractility and stiffness. By doing so, we linked cell-level phenotypic changes to functional changes that characterize the clinical manifestation of fibrotic disease. As expected, TGF-β1 treatment promoted a myofibroblastic phenotype and microtissues became stiffer and possessed increased contractility. Furthermore, these changes were partially reversible upon TGF-β1 withdrawal. In contrast, however, long-term cyclic stretching maintained myofibroblast activation. Furthermore stretching had no effect compared static cultures when TGF-β1 receptors were inhibited and stretching promoted myofibroblast differentiation when given latent TGF-β1. Together these results suggest that external mechanical stretch may activate latent TGF-β1 and might be a powerful stimulus for continued myofibroblast activation to progress fibrosis. Further exploration of this pathway with our approach may yield new insights into myofibroblast activation and more effective therapeutic treatments for fibrosis.Insight box Using a novel high-throughput approach, we quantified the effects of dynamic mechanical stretching on the phenotype and function of cells in 3D microtissue cultures during myofibroblast activation with TGF-β1 treatment and subsequent withdrawal. Our findings show that mechanical stretch may activate endogenously produced latent TGF-β1 to maintain the presence and activity of myofibroblasts after tissue injury. Importantly, through this feed forward mechanism, mechanical stretch might be a powerful stimulus that directs tissues away from recovery and towards the development of fibrosis. ER -