Engineering a Matrix-Preserving Vascular dECM Platform with Tunable Stiffness for In Vitro Vascular Remodeling
Engineering a Matrix-Preserving Vascular dECM Platform with Tunable Stiffness for In Vitro Vascular Remodeling
Heo, Y.; Drewes, R.; Lee, S.-H.; Bae, Y.; Heo, S. C.
AbstractPathologic arterial stiffening is a hallmark of vascular disease that contributes to maladaptive vascular remodeling and neointimal hyperplasia through vascular smooth muscle cell (VSMC) phenotypic switching. Yet, because vascular disease progression is governed by both biomechanical and extracellular matrix (ECM) alterations, existing in vitro models often fail to recapitulate the full complexity of the diseased vascular microenvironment. Here, we developed a bioactive decellularized extracellular matrix (dECM) and methacrylated hyaluronic acid (MeHA) composite scaffold platform with tunable stiffness that preserves native vascular ECM components while enabling controlled investigation of stiffness-dependent cell behavior. Proteomic analyses confirmed retention of key vascular matrisome components, including collagens and glycoproteins, following decellularization. Electrospun vascular dECM scaffolds maintained an aligned fibrous architecture and spanned stiffness ranges representative of healthy and pathologically stiffened arterial microenvironments. Within this matrix-preserving platform, human VSMCs cultured on stiff dECM scaffolds exhibited increased spreading, altered morphology, enhanced nuclear localization of YAP and survivin, and broad transcriptional changes consistent with a shift toward a proliferative, matrix-remodeling VSMC phenotype. Together, this bioactive, matrix-preserving platform enables mechanobiologically relevant modeling of stiffness-driven vascular remodeling and indicates YAP and survivin as candidate regulators of maladaptive VSMC mechanotransduction.