Affiliation:
1. The Wilf Family Cardiovascular Research Institute Department of Medicine (Cardiology), Albert Einstein College of Medicine Bronx NY
Abstract
Background
Interstitial and perivascular fibrosis may contribute to diabetes‐associated heart failure. Pericytes can convert to fibroblasts under conditions of stress and have been implicated in the pathogenesis of fibrotic diseases. We hypothesized that in diabetic hearts, pericytes may convert to fibroblasts, contributing to fibrosis and to the development of diastolic dysfunction.
Methods and Results
Using pericyte:fibroblast dual reporter (NG2
Dsred
[neuron‐glial antigen 2 red fluorescent protein variant]; PDGFRα
EGFP
[platelet‐derived growth factor receptor alpha enhanced green fluorescent protein]) mice in a type 2 diabetic db/db background, we found that diabetes does not significantly affect pericyte density but reduces the myocardial pericyte:fibroblast ratio. Lineage tracing using the inducible NG2
CreER
driver, along with reliable labeling of fibroblasts with the PDGFRα reporter system, showed no significant pericyte to fibroblast conversion in lean and db/db hearts. In addition, db/db mouse cardiac fibroblasts did not undergo myofibroblast conversion and had no significant induction of structural collagens but exhibited a matrix‐preserving phenotype, associated with increased expression of antiproteases, matricellular genes, matrix cross‐linking enzymes, and the fibrogenic transcription factor
cMyc
. In contrast, db/db mouse cardiac pericytes had increased expression of
Timp3
, without any changes in expression of other fibrosis‐associated genes. The matrix‐preserving phenotype of diabetic fibroblasts was associated with induction of genes encoding oxidative (
Ptgs2
/cycloxygenase‐2, and
Fmo2
) and antioxidant proteins (
Hmox1
,
Sod1
). In vitro, high glucose partially recapitulated the in vivo changes in diabetic fibroblasts.
Conclusions
Diabetic fibrosis is not mediated through pericyte to fibroblast conversion but involves acquisition of a matrix‐preserving fibroblast program, which is independent of myofibroblast conversion and is only partially explained by the effects of the hyperglycemic environment.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
6 articles.
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