BME Student Seminar (Zoom): Praveen Veerasubramanian and Hamza Atcha

Zoom (link below)
Praveen Veerasubramanian and Hamza Atcha

Graduate students
Department of Biomedical Engineering
UC Irvine
Praveen Veerasubramanian co-advised by Wendy Liu and Tim Downing
Hamza Atcha advised by Wendy Liu

Zoomhttps://uci.zoom.us/j/99949846945

Praveen Veerasubramanian: Micropatterning-facilitated macrophage elongation dampens a Src-p300-H3Ac axis to tune inflammation

Abstract: Macrophages are mechanosensitive cells that can exquisitely fine tune their function in response to their microenvironment. While macrophage polarization results in concomitant changes in cell morphology and epigenetic reprogramming, how biophysically induced signaling cascades contribute to gene regulatory programs that drive polarization remains unknown. We reveal a cytoskeleton-dependent Src-H3 acetylation (H3Ac) axis responsible for inflammation-associated histone hyperacetylation. Inflammatory stimuli caused increases in traction forces, Src activity and H3Ac marks in macrophages, accompanied by lower elongation and motility. These effects were curtailed following disruption of H3Ac-signaling through either micropattern-induced cell elongation or inhibition of H3Ac readers (BRD proteins) directly. Src activation relieves the suppression of p300 histone acetyltransferase (HAT) activity by PKCδ. Furthermore, while inhibition of Src reduced p300 HAT activity and H3Ac marks globally, local H3Ac levels within the Src promoter were increased, suggesting H3Ac regulates Src levels through feedback. Together, our study reveals an adhesome-to-epigenome regulatory nexus underlying macrophage mechanosensation, where Src modulates H3Ac-associated epigenetic signaling as a means of tuning inflammatory gene activity and macrophage fate decisions in response to microenvironmental cues.

Hamza Atcha: Mechanically activated ion channel Piezo1 modulates macrophage polarization and stiffness sensing

Abstract: Macrophages perform diverse functions within tissues during immune responses to pathogens and injury, but molecular mechanisms by which physical properties of the tissue regulate macrophage behavior are less well understood. Here, we examine the role of the mechanically activated cation channel Piezo1 in macrophage polarization and sensing of microenvironmental stiffness. We show that macrophages lacking Piezo1 exhibit reduced inflammation and enhanced wound healing responses. Additionally, macrophages expressing the transgenic Ca2+ reporter, Salsa6f, reveal that Ca2+ influx is dependent on Piezo1, modulated by soluble signals and enhanced on stiff substrates. Furthermore, stiffness-dependent changes in macrophage function, both in vitro and in response to subcutaneous implantation of biomaterials in vivo, require Piezo1. Finally, we show that positive feedback between Piezo1 and actin drives macrophage activation. Together, our studies reveal that Piezo1 is a mechanosensor of stiffness and that its activity modulates macrophage polarization responses.

Please contact Julianne Vu jevu@uci.edu with any questions.