BMP9 and BMP10 Act Directly on Vascular Smooth Muscle Cells for Generation and Maintenance of the Contractile State

Author:

Wang Lei1,Rice Megan1ORCID,Swist Sandra1ORCID,Kubin Thomas2,Wu Fan1,Wang Shengpeng3,Kraut Simone4,Weissmann Norbert45,Böttger Thomas1,Wheeler Matthew1,Schneider Andre1,Braun Thomas16ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Cardiac Development and Remodeling (L.W., M.R., S.S., F.W., T.B., M.W., A.S., T.B.)

2. Kerckhoff-Clinic, Bad Nauheim, Germany (T.K.).

3. Cardiac Surgery (S.W.), Max Planck Institute for Heart and Lung Research, Bad Nauheim, Germany.

4. Excellence Cluster Cardiopulmonary System, University of Giessen Lung Center, German Center for Lung Research (DZL), Justus-Liebig-University, Giessen, Germany (S.K., N.W.).

5. German Centre for Lung Research (DZL), Partner site Giessen, Germany (N.W.).

6. German Centre for Cardiovascular Research (DZHK), Partner site Rhein-Main, Frankfurt am Main, Germany (T.B.).

Abstract

Background: Vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) show a remarkable phenotypic plasticity, allowing acquisition of contractile or synthetic states, but critical information is missing about the physiologic signals, promoting formation, and maintenance of contractile VSMCs in vivo. BMP9 and BMP10 (bone morphogenetic protein) are known to regulate endothelial quiescence after secretion from the liver and right atrium, whereas a direct role in the regulation of VSMCs was not investigated. We studied the role of BMP9 and BMP10 for controlling formation of contractile VSMCs. Methods: We generated several cell type–specific loss- and gain-of-function transgenic mouse models to investigate the physiologic role of BMP9, BMP10, ALK1 (activin receptor-like kinase 1), and SMAD7 in vivo. Morphometric assessments, expression analysis, blood pressure measurements, and single molecule fluorescence in situ hybridization were performed together with analysis of isolated pulmonary VSMCs to unravel phenotypic and transcriptomic changes in response to absence or presence of BMP9 and BMP10. Results: Concomitant genetic inactivation of Bmp9 in the germ line and Bmp10 in the right atrium led to dramatic changes in vascular tone and diminution of the VSMC layer with attenuated contractility and decreased systemic as well as right ventricular systolic pressure. On the contrary, overexpression of Bmp10 in endothelial cells of adult mice dramatically enhanced formation of contractile VSMCs and increased systemic blood pressure as well as right ventricular systolic pressure. Likewise, BMP9/10 treatment induced an ALK1-dependent phenotypic switch from synthetic to contractile in pulmonary VSMCs. Smooth muscle cell–specific overexpression of Smad7 completely suppressed differentiation and proliferation of VSMCs and reiterated defects observed in adult Bmp9/10 double mutants. Deletion of Alk1 in VSMCs recapitulated the Bmp9/10 phenotype in pulmonary but not in aortic and coronary arteries. Bulk expression analysis and single molecule RNA–fluorescence in situ hybridization uncovered vessel bed–specific, heterogeneous expression of BMP type 1 receptors, explaining phenotypic differences in different Alk1 mutant vessel beds. Conclusions: Our study demonstrates that BMP9 and BMP10 act directly on VSMCs for induction and maintenance of their contractile state. The effects of BMP9/10 in VSMCs are mediated by different combinations of BMP type 1 receptors in a vessel bed–specific manner, offering new opportunities to manipulate blood pressure in the pulmonary circulation.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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2. Pulmonary Hypertension: A Contemporary Review;American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine;2023-09-01

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4. BMP9 functions as a negative regulator in the myogenic differentiation of primary mouse myoblasts;Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry;2023-08-08

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