Selective inhibition of stromal mechanosensing suppresses cardiac fibrosis Podcast Por  arte de portada

Selective inhibition of stromal mechanosensing suppresses cardiac fibrosis

Selective inhibition of stromal mechanosensing suppresses cardiac fibrosis

Escúchala gratis

Ver detalles del espectáculo

Acerca de esta escucha

Cho, S., Rhee, S., Madl, C.M. et al. Selective inhibition of stromal mechanosensing suppresses cardiac fibrosis. Nature (2025). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-08945-9

Published: 30 April 2025 from Joseph C. Wu Group at Stanford University, School of Medicine

Abstract: Matrix-derived biophysical cues are known to regulate the activation of fibroblasts and their subsequent transdifferentiation into myofibroblasts, but whether modulation of these signals can suppress fibrosis in intact tissues remains unclear, particularly in the cardiovascular system. Here we demonstrate across multiple scales that inhibition of matrix mechanosensing in persistently activated cardiac fibroblasts potentiates—in concert with soluble regulators of the TGFβ pathway—a robust transcriptomic, morphological and metabolic shift towards quiescence. By conducting a meta-analysis of public human and mouse single-cell sequencing datasets, we identify the focal-adhesion-associated tyrosine kinase SRC as a fibroblast-enriched mechanosensor that can be targeted selectively in stromal cells to mimic the effects of matrix softening in vivo. Pharmacological inhibition of SRC by saracatinib, coupled with TGFβ suppression, induces synergistic repression of key profibrotic gene programs in fibroblasts, characterized by a marked inhibition of the MRTF–SRF pathway, which is not seen after treatment with either drug alone. Importantly, the dual treatment alleviates contractile dysfunction in fibrotic engineered heart tissues and in a mouse model of heart failure. Our findings point to joint inhibition of SRC-mediated stromal mechanosensing and TGFβ signalling as a potential mechanotherapeutic strategy for treating cardiovascular fibrosis.

#CardiacFibrosis #CarT #FAP

adbl_web_global_use_to_activate_T1_webcro805_stickypopup
Todavía no hay opiniones