Mechanobiological Adaptation to Hyperosmolarity Enhances Barrier Function in Human Vascular Microphysiological System

Author:

Kang Joon Ho1,Jang Minjeong1,Seo Su Jin12,Choi Andrew1,Shin Daeeun13,Seo Suyoung14,Lee Soo Hyun15,Kim Hong Nam1567ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Brain Science Institute Korea Institute of Science and Technology Seoul 02792 Republic of Korea

2. Department of Chemical Engineering Kwangwoon University Seoul 01897 Republic of Korea

3. School of Mechanical Engineering Sungkyunkwan University Suwon 16419 Republic of Korea

4. Program in Nano Science and Technology Graduate School of Convergence Science and Technology Seoul National University Seoul 08826 Republic of Korea

5. Division of Bio‐Medical Science & Technology KIST School University of Science and Technology (UST) Seoul 02792 Republic of Korea

6. School of Mechanical Engineering Yonsei University Seoul 03722 Republic of Korea

7. Yonsei‐KIST Convergence Research Institute Yonsei University Seoul 03722 Republic of Korea

Abstract

AbstractIn infectious disease such as sepsis and COVID‐19, blood vessel leakage treatment is critical to prevent fatal progression into multi‐organ failure and ultimately death, but the existing effective therapeutic modalities that improve vascular barrier function are limited. Here, this study reports that osmolarity modulation can significantly improve vascular barrier function, even in an inflammatory condition. 3D human vascular microphysiological systems and automated permeability quantification processes for high‐throughput analysis of vascular barrier function are utilized. Vascular barrier function is enhanced by >7‐folds with 24–48 h hyperosmotic exposure (time window of emergency care; >500 mOsm L−1) but is disrupted after hypo‐osmotic exposure (<200 mOsm L−1). By integrating genetic and protein level analysis, it is shown that hyperosmolarity upregulates vascular endothelial‐cadherin, cortical F‐actin, and cell–cell junction tension, indicating that hyperosmotic adaptation mechanically stabilizes the vascular barrier. Importantly, improved vascular barrier function following hyperosmotic exposure is maintained even after chronic exposure to proinflammatory cytokines and iso‐osmotic recovery via Yes‐associated protein signaling pathways. This study suggests that osmolarity modulation may be a unique therapeutic strategy to proactively prevent infectious disease progression into severe stages via vascular barrier function protection.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Engineering,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous),General Materials Science,General Chemical Engineering,Medicine (miscellaneous)

Cited by 3 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Vascular microphysiological systems;Current Opinion in Hematology;2024-01-19

2. Hypertonic treatment of acute respiratory distress syndrome;Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology;2023-10-23

3. Engineering vascularized organotypic tissues via module assembly;International Journal of Extreme Manufacturing;2023-10-11

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