Disrupting biological sensors of force promotes tissue regeneration in large organisms

Kellen Chen(Stanford University), Sun Hyung Kwon(Stanford University), Dominic Henn(Stanford University), Britta Kuehlmann(University Hospital Regensburg), Ruth Tevlin(Stanford University), Clark A. Bonham(Stanford University), Michelle Griffin(Stanford University), Artem A. Trotsyuk(Stanford University), Mimi R. Borrelli(Stanford University), Chikage Noishiki(Stanford University), Jagannath Padmanabhan(Stanford University), Janos A. Barrera(Stanford University), Zeshaan N. Maan(Stanford University), Teruyuki Dohi(Stanford University), Chyna J. Mays(Stanford University), Autumn H. Greco(Stanford University), Dharshan Sivaraj(Stanford University), John Q. Lin(Stanford University), Tobias Fehlmann(Saarland University), Alana M. Mermin-Bunnell(Stanford University), Smiti Mittal(Stanford University), Michael S. Hu(Stanford University), Alsu I. Zamaleeva(Stanford University), Andreas Keller(Saarland University), Jayakumar Rajadas(Stanford University), Michael T. Longaker(Stanford University), Michael Januszyk(Stanford University), Geoffrey C. Gurtner(Stanford University)
Nature Communications
September 6, 2021
Cited by 90Open Access
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Abstract

Tissue repair and healing remain among the most complicated processes that occur during postnatal life. Humans and other large organisms heal by forming fibrotic scar tissue with diminished function, while smaller organisms respond with scarless tissue regeneration and functional restoration. Well-established scaling principles reveal that organism size exponentially correlates with peak tissue forces during movement, and evolutionary responses have compensated by strengthening organ-level mechanical properties. How these adaptations may affect tissue injury has not been previously examined in large animals and humans. Here, we show that blocking mechanotransduction signaling through the focal adhesion kinase pathway in large animals significantly accelerates wound healing and enhances regeneration of skin with secondary structures such as hair follicles. In human cells, we demonstrate that mechanical forces shift fibroblasts toward pro-fibrotic phenotypes driven by ERK-YAP activation, leading to myofibroblast differentiation and excessive collagen production. Disruption of mechanical signaling specifically abrogates these responses and instead promotes regenerative fibroblast clusters characterized by AKT-EGR1.


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