Abstract

Fibronectin, an extracellular matrix protein, is associated with the general process of tissue repair and is present in heart valves. In order to understand the cellular mechanisms of heart valve repair, we hypothesized that fibronectin is produced and secreted by valvular interstitial cells (VICs), and when up-regulated in VICs involved in active repair, it is associated with prominent fibrillar adhesions composed of tensin and alpha(5)beta(1) integrin. We investigated the interaction of porcine mitral VICs with the underlying fibronectin matrix and the formation and localization of focal and fibrillar adhesion complexes in an in vitro wound model. Confluent monolayers of VICs were wounded with a 1-mm-wide cell scraper, maintained in standard media and 10% fetal bovine serum, and fixed at various time points after wounding. Immunohistochemistry was used to localize fibronectin, paxillin, tensin, and alpha(5)beta(1) integrin. F-actin was localized with an Alexa-Fluor-568-labeled phalloidin. Cells were examined with a scanning confocal laser microscope. In response to in vitro mechanical wounding, migrating VICs at the wound edge expressed cytoplasmic fibronectin compared to nonwounded confluent monolayers. Over 24 to 48 h, fibrils were deposited into the subcellular space. Coincident with this, staining for alpha(5)beta(1) appeared, and tensin redistributed from focal adhesions to fibrillar adhesions, which colocalized with alpha(5)beta(1). Fibronectin in association with fibrillar adhesions is a component of the matrix that may be secreted by migrating VICs to regulate repair at sites of valve injury.

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