Circulation Research. 2007;100:1399-1401
doi: 10.1161/01.RES.0000269327.83426.d9
(Circulation Research. 2007;100:1399.)
© 2007 American Heart Association, Inc.
New Insights Into the Developmental Biomechanics of the Atrioventricular Valves
Bradley B. Keller
From the Professor of Pediatrics and Director, Pediatric Innovative Biomedical Technology Development, Department of Pediatrics, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Childrens Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC.
Correspondence to Bradley B. Keller, Division of Pediatric Cardiology, Heart Center, Childrens Hospital of Pittsburgh, 3705 Fifth Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15213. E-mail Bradley.Keller{at}chp.edu
See related article, pages 15031511
Key Words: cardiac morphogenesis biomechanics atrioventricular valves
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Introduction
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In this issue, Butcher et al,
1 provide elegant data on the mechanical
performance and material properties of stage 17, 21, and 25
chick embryonic atrioventricular (AV) cushions during normal
development and following the selective digestion of AV cushion
constituents. These data are then interpreted using a strain-energy
based pseudoelasticity theory to determine maturational changes
in AV cushion material coefficients and effective modulus. The
experimental approach developed by Butcher and colleagues and
their observation that developmental changes in AV cushion function
are because of changes in cushion constituents and material
properties represent an important advance in our understanding
of the role of tissue composition on valve morphogenesis. Further,
this study represents the first direct correlation of in vivo
AV cushion kinematics and blood velocity with biomechanical
properties during AV valve morphogenesis that includes experimental
validation via the selective enzymatic digestion of either glycosaminoglycans
or collagens to alter cushion properties.
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Insights into the Role of AV Cushion Maturation on Embryonic Cardiac Function
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As the first functioning organ, experimental data from numerous
animal model systems show that the embryonic heart generates
forward blood flow while transforming from a contracting linear
tube into the multi-chambered heart.
26 From the onset
of the heart beat, the AV cushions coapt to prevent retrograde
flow during ventricular systole,
7,8 and have a delayed depolarization
velocity relative to the surrounding myocardium to facilitate
forward flow.
9 Recently, confocal laser slit-scanning microscopy
has revealed dynamic AV cushion deformation patterns during
morphogenesis consistent with the transition from a peristaltic
(suction) to a pulsatile ventricular pump.
10 The data from Butcher
et al confirm these findings and note that AV cushion deformation
patterns are consistent with maturation associated increased
AV cushion stiffness because of decreasing glycosaminoglycan
and increasing collagen content.
1
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Insights into the Molecular Regulation of AV Valve Morphogenesis and the Relationship Between Cushion Constituents and Valve Function
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Following the pioneering studies of Runyan and Markwald in the
early 1980s,
11,12 subsequent investigation has shown that transformation
of the amorphous endocardial cushions into mature valve leaflets
involves temporally and spatially specific gene and protein
expression patterns, cell migration and differentiation within
the cushions (termed endothelial-mesenchymal transformation,
EMT), extracellular matrix synthesis and degradation, and cell
death, and tissue remodeling.
1316 Errors along these
developmental cascades produce aberrant endocardial cushions,
dysplastic cardiac valves, and are often embryo lethal. A number
of human candidate genes have now been associated with congenital
AV valve defects, and as expected these candidate genes are
involved in matrix synthesis and remodeling.
17 The data from
Butcher et al support the paradigm that altered matrix composition
is likely to impact both AV cushion material properties and
function.
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The Application of Biomechanical Engineering Analyses to the Developing Heart
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The availability of experimental data from the embryonic heart
has been critical to the evolution of biomechanical models of
cardiac morphogenesis. Perhaps the first investigation of cardiac
cushion material properties was performed by Frank Manasek and
colleagues to measure the deformation (and material properties)
of the embryonic chick heart.
18 These experimental results were
used by Taber and colleagues in a biomechanical model for the
developing embryonic ventricle
19 and stimulated the refinement
of experimental methods to generate stress-strain data from
the embryonic heart for model validation.
20,21 Although several
studies have investigated the passive properties of the embryonic
myocardium, the studies by Butcher et al are the first to provide
material properties data on the developing cardiac valves.
In the current study by Butcher and colleagues, composite material properties of the developing embryonic AV cushions were calculated using data from micropipette aspirations of normal stage 17 to stage 25 in chick embryo AV cushion explants and following the selected digestion of glycosaminoglycans, collagens, and cell-matrix attachments. Data were fit using a stain-energy based pseudoeleastic model with the assumption that the cushion material was homogenous, isotropic, and nonlinear hyperelastic. This approach represented the use of current published approaches that acknowledge the limitations of representing complex biologic structures using numerical models.2224 Mixture theory was used to predict the impact of altered cushion constituents (volume fractions) on material properties. As might be expected, AV cushions were the most pliable at stage 17 and became more rigid during cushion morphogenesis consistent with increased cellularity and matrix maturation. Increased rigidity is consistent with the shift from wave-like cushion deformations at stage 17 heart to more rigid cushion motion at stage 25. As would also be expected, the enzymatic digestion of glycosaminoglycans resulted in increased cushion rigidity while collagen digestion in increased cushion fragility and produced a more linear elastic behavior. The approach of Butcher et al can now be used to investigate models of aberrant AV valve development associated with altered cushion matrix synthesis, cross-linking, or degradation, recognizing the limitations of generalizing local material property measurements to global valve behavior.
Altered AV cushion properties (and deformation) likely impact valve morphogenesis. Several recent reports have described changes in the expression of shear-responsive genes on the endothelial surfaces of cardiac cushions during normal and experimentally altered loading conditions.25 Myofibroblasts within the developing AV cushions likely sense biomechanical events with subsequent effects on cell migration, proliferation, differentiation, and survival.2628 Thus, another potential mechanism for abnormal cushion maturation and remodeling may be abnormal signal transduction of biomechanical cues during morphogenesis.
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Implications For the Generation of Tissue-Engineered Valves
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The biomechanical testing of mature AV valves has focused, primarily,
on determining the "ideal" material properties for tissue engineered,
replacement cardiac valves. In the study by Butcher et al, a
biomechanics approach is used to determine changes in material
properties during normal valve development to develop insights
into the processes that regulate AV cushion morphogenesis. These
insights are likely to be critical to identifying the anisotropic
material properties,
29 and unique biomechanically sensitive
cell populations
2831 required to manufacture durable
cardiac valves.
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Acknowledgments
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Sources of Funding
Our laboratory is supported by grants from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and by the Childrens Hospital of Pittsburgh Foundation.
Disclosures
None.
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Footnotes
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The opinions expressed in this editorial are not necessarily
those of the editors or of the American Heart Association.
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Related Article:
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Transitions in Early Embryonic Atrioventricular Valvular Function Correspond With Changes in Cushion Biomechanics That Are Predictable by Tissue Composition
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[Abstract]
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