Author:
Sivaguru Mayandi,Mori Shumpei,Fouke Kyle W.,Ajijola Olujimi A.,Shivkumar Kalyanam,Samuel Ashok Z.,Bhargava Rohit,Fouke Bruce W.
Abstract
AbstractCalcification of aortic valve leaflets is a growing mortality threat for the 18 million human lives claimed globally each year by heart disease. Extensive research has focused on the cellular and molecular pathophysiology associated with calcification, yet the detailed composition, structure, distribution and etiological history of mineral deposition remains unknown. Here transdisciplinary geology, biology and medicine (GeoBioMed) approaches prove that leaflet calcification is driven by amorphous calcium phosphate (ACP), ACP at the threshold of transformation toward hydroxyapatite (HAP) and cholesterol biomineralization. A paragenetic sequence of events is observed that includes: (1) original formation of unaltered leaflet tissues: (2) individual and coalescing 100’s nm- to 1 μm-scale ACP spherules and cholesterol crystals biomineralizing collagen fibers and smooth muscle cell myofilaments; (3) osteopontin coatings that stabilize ACP and collagen containment of nodules preventing exposure to the solution chemistry and water content of pumping blood, which combine to slow transformation to HAP; (4) mm-scale nodule growth via ACP spherule coalescence, diagenetic incorporation of altered collagen and aggregation with other ACP nodules; and (5) leaflet diastole and systole flexure causing nodules to twist, fold their encasing collagen fibers and increase stiffness. These in vivo mechanisms combine to slow leaflet calcification and establish previously unexplored hypotheses for testing novel drug therapies and clinical interventions as viable alternatives to current reliance on surgical/percutaneous valve implants.
Funder
National Institutes of Health
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference79 articles.
1. Lowenstam, H. A. & Weiner, S. Transformation of amorphous calcium phosphate to crystalline dahllite in the radular teeth of chitons. Science 227, 51–53 (1985).
2. Pulletikurti, S., Veena, K. S., Yadav, M., Deniz, A. A. & Krishnamurthy, R. Experimentally modeling the emergence of prebiotically plausible phospholipid vesicles. Chem https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chempr.2024.02.007 (2024).
3. Degli Esposti, L. & Iafisco, M. Amorphous calcium phosphate, the lack of order is an abundance of possibilities. Biomater. Biosyst. 5, 100037 (2022).
4. Dorozhkin, S. Calcium orthophosphates in nature, biology and medicine. Materials 2, 399–498 (2009).
5. Habraken, W. J. E. M. et al. Ion-association complexes unite classical and non-classical theories for the biomimetic nucleation of calcium phosphate. Nat. Commun. 4, 1507 (2013).