European Journal of Cell Biology (Jun 2024)

The mechanical mechanism of angiotensin II induced activation of hepatic stellate cells promoting portal hypertension

  • Yiheng Zhang,
  • Mulan Xing,
  • Fansheng Meng,
  • Ling Zhu,
  • Qingchuan Huang,
  • Tianle Ma,
  • Huihua Fang,
  • Xujing Gu,
  • Suzhou Huang,
  • Xinyu Wu,
  • Gaohong Lv,
  • Jun Guo,
  • Li Wu,
  • Xin Liu,
  • Zhipeng Chen

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 103, no. 2
p. 151427

Abstract

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In the development of chronic liver disease, the hepatic stellate cell (HSC) plays a pivotal role in increasing intrahepatic vascular resistance (IHVR) and inducing portal hypertension (PH) in cirrhosis. Our research demonstrated that HSC contraction, prompted by angiotensin II (Ang II), significantly contributed to the elevation of type I collagen (COL1A1) expression. This increase was intimately associated with enhanced cell tension and YAP nuclear translocation, mediated through α-smooth muscle actin (α-SMA) expression, microfilaments (MF) polymerization, and stress fibers (SF) assembly. Further investigation revealed that the Rho/ROCK signaling pathway regulated MF polymerization and SF assembly by facilitating the phosphorylation of cofilin and MLC, while Ca2+ chiefly governed SF assembly via MLC. Inhibiting α-SMA-MF-SF assembly changed Ang II-induced cell contraction, YAP nuclear translocation, and COL1A1 expression, findings corroborated in cirrhotic mice models. Overall, our study offers insights into mitigating IHVR and PH through cell mechanics, heralding potential breakthroughs.

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