INTRODUCTION    
    Fibrosis is implicated in nearly 45% of all deaths in the    developed world and plays a role in numerous pathologies,    including pulmonary fibrosis, cardiac disease, atherosclerosis,    and cancer (1). In particular,    interstitial lung diseases, such as idiopathic pulmonary    fibrosis (IPF), are fatal and incurable with a median survival    of only 2 to 5 years (2). Often    described as dysregulated or incessant wound healing, fibrosis    involves persistent cycles of tissue injury and deposition of    extracellular matrix (ECM) by myofibroblasts (MFs). These    critical cellular mediators of fibrogenesis are primarily    derived from tissue-resident fibroblasts (1). MFs drive eventual organ    failure through excessive fibrous ECM deposition, force    generation and tissue contraction, and eventual disruption of    parenchymal tissue function (1).    As organ transplantation remains the only curative option for    late-stage disease, effective antifibrotic therapeutics that    slow MF expansion or even reverse fibrosed tissue remain a    major unmet clinical need. Undoubtedly, the limited efficacy of    antifibrotic drugs at present underscores limitations of    existing models for identifying therapeutics, the complexity of    the disease, and an incomplete understanding of MF biology.  
    A strong correlation between lung tissue stiffening and worse    patient outcomes suggests an important role for matrix    mechanosensing in fibrotic disease progression (3). Preclinical models of fibrosis    in mice have supported the link between tissue stiffening and    disease progression. However, a precise understanding of how    physical cues from the microenvironment influence MF    differentiation in vivo is confounded by concurrent structural    (e.g., collagen density and laminin/elastin degradation) and    biochemical (e.g., matrix composition and inflammatory) changes    to the microenvironment (4).    Consequently, natural and synthetic in vitro tissue models have    provided great utility for the study of MF mechanobiology.    Seminal studies using natural type I collagen gels have    elucidated the role of profibrotic soluble cues [e.g.,    transforming growth factor1 (TGF-1)] in promoting cell    contractility, ECM compaction, and MF differentiation, and more    recently, precision-cut lung slices, have emerged as a powerful    tool to study the complexity of the pulmonary microenvironment    in IPF (4, 5).    However, their utility in identifying physical    microenvironmental determinants of MF differentiation suffers    from an intrinsic coupling of multiple biochemical and    mechanical material properties (6).    Rapid degradation kinetics (1 to 3 days) and resulting issues    with material stability (1 to 2 weeks) further impede the use    of natural materials for studying fibrogenic events and drug    responses, which occur over weeks to months in in vivo models    or years in patients (7, 8).  
    Synthetic hydrogels that are more resistant to cell-mediated    degradation have provided a better controlled setting for    long-term studies of disease-related processes (9). For example, synthetic    hydrogel-based cell culture substrates with tunable stiffness    have helped establish a paradigm for mechanosensing during MF    differentiation in two-dimensions (2D), where compliant    matrices maintain fibroblast quiescence in contrast to stiffer    matrices that promote MF differentiation (10, 11). Extensive findings in 2D    suggest a causal role for matrix mechanics (e.g., stiffness)    during MF differentiation in vitro and potentially in human    disease, but these models lack the 3D nature of interstitial    spaces where fibrosis originates (12). The interstitium surrounding    alveoli is structurally composed of two key components:    networks of fibrous ECM proteins (namely, type I collagen    fibers) and interpenetrating ground substance, an amorphous    hydrogel network rich in glycosaminoglycans such as heparan    sulfate proteoglycan. Mechanical cues from fibrotic ECM that    promote MF differentiation may arise from changes to the    collagen fiber architecture or the gel-like ground substance;    whether matrix stiffness is a prerequisite for MF    differentiation in 3D fibrous interstitial spaces remains    unclear (13). Furthermore, the limited    efficacy of antifibrotic therapies identified in preclinical    and in vitro models of IPF motivates the development of 3D    tissue-engineered systems with improved structural and    mechanical biomimicry, relevant pharmacokinetics, and the    potential to incorporate patient cells (9). Furthermore, recapitulating key    features of the fibrotic progression in an in vitro setting    that better approximates interstitial tissues could (i) improve    our current understanding of MF mechanobiology and (ii) serve    as a more suitable test bed for potential antifibrotic    therapeutics.  
    Accordingly, here, we describe a microengineered pulmonary    interstitial matrix that recapitulates mechanical and    structural features of fibrotic tissue as well as key    biological events observed during IPF progression. Design    parameters of these engineered microenvironments were informed    by mechanical and structural characterization of fibrotic lung    tissue from a bleomycin mouse model. We then investigated the    influence of dimensionality, matrix cross-linking/stiffness,    and fiber density on TGF-1induced MF differentiation in our    pulmonary interstitial matrices. Increased hydrogel    cross-linking/stiffness substantially hindered MF    differentiation in 3D in contrast to findings in 2D, while    fibrotic matrix architecture (i.e., high fiber density)    potently promoted fibroblast proliferation and differentiation    into MFs. Long-term (21 days) culture of hydrogels with a    fibrotic architecture engendered tissue stiffening, collagen    deposition, and secretion of profibrotic cytokines, implicating    fiber density as a potent fibrogenic cue in 3D    microenvironments. Pharmacologic screening in fibrotic    pulmonary interstitial matrices revealed matrix    metalloproteinase (MMP) activity and hydrogel remodeling as a    key step during 3D fibrogenesis, but not in traditional 2D    settings. To explore the clinical relevance of our findings, we    leveraged a multistep bioinformatics analysis of    transcriptional profiles from 231 patients, highlighting    increased MMP gene expression and enriched signaling domains    associated with matrix degradation in patients with IPF.    Together, these results highlight the utility of studying    fibrogenesis in a physiologically relevant 3D hydrogel model,    underscore the requirement of matrix remodeling in IPF, and    establish a new platform for screening antifibrotic therapies.  
      To inform key design criteria for our pulmonary interstitial      matrices, we began by characterizing mechanical properties of      fibrotic interstitial tissue in a bleomycin-induced lung      injury model in mouse. Nave C57BL/6 mice were      intratracheally challenged with bleomycin to induce lung      injury and subsequent fibro-proliferative repair, with      saline-treated animals maintained as a control group. After 2      weeks, animals were sacrificed and lung tissue was dissected      out, sectioned and stained, and then mechanically tested by      atomic force microscopy (AFM) nanoindentation to map the      stiffness of interstitial tissue surrounding alveoli. While      single-dose bleomycin administration does not recapitulate      human IPF, the fibro-proliferative response is well      characterized and leads to MF differentiation, collagen      deposition, and lung stiffening events that are reminiscent      of what occurs in human disease over longer time scales. As      previously documented (14), bleomycin treatment      corresponded to an increase in the thickness of interstitial      tissue regions surrounding alveoli, a structural change that      occurred alongside matrix stiffening (Fig. 1, A and      B); bleomycin-treated lungs had elastic moduli nearly      fivefold greater than healthy control tissues. To generate      synthetic hydrogels with elastic moduli tunable over this      range, we functionalized a biocompatible and      protein-resistant polysaccharide, dextran, with pendant vinyl      sulfone groups amenable to peptide conjugation (termed DexVS;      Fig. 1C). To permit cell-mediated      proteolytic hydrogel degradation and thus spreading of      encapsulated cells, we cross-linked DexVS with a bifunctional      peptide (GCVPMSMRGGCG,      abbreviated VPMS) primarily sensitive to MMP9 and MMP14, two      MMPs implicated in fibrosis-associated matrix remodeling      (15, 16). Tuning input VPMS      cross-linker concentration yielded stable hydrogels spanning      the full range of elastic moduli we measured by AFM      nanoindentation of lung tissue (Fig. 1D).      Additional functionalization with cell-adhesive moieties      (CGRGDS, abbreviated RGD)      facilitated adhesion of primary normal human lung fibroblasts      (NHLFs) (Fig. 1E).    
      (A) Histological preparations of healthy      control and bleomycin-treated murine lung tissue (n      = 3 mice per group) stained for collagen by picrosirius red      (scale bar, 100 m). (B) Youngs modulus of      mouse lung tissue as measured by AFM nanoindentation, with      data fit to the Hertz contact model to determine Youngs      modulus (n = 3 mice per group, n = 50      indentations per group on n = 9 tissue sections).      (C) Schematic of proteolytically sensitive,      cell-adhesive DexVS-VPMS bulk hydrogels. (D)      Youngs modulus determined by AFM nanoindentation of      DexVS-VPMS hydrogels formed with different concentrations of      VPMS cross-linker (n = 4 samples per group,      n = 20 total indentations per group).      (E and F) Representative      images of F-actin (cyan), nuclei (yellow), and -SMA      (magenta); image-based quantification of -SMA expression      (left axis, magenta bars, day 9) and nuclear Ki67 (right      axis, gray bars, day 5) in 2D and 3D (n = 4 samples      per group, n = 10 fields of view per group,      n > 50 cells per field of view; scale bars, 200      m). All data presented are means  SDs with superimposed      data points; asterisk denotes significance with P      < 0.05 determined by one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA).      AU, arbitrary units.    
      To confirm the role of matrix mechanics on cell proliferation      and MF differentiation, we seeded patient-derived NHLFs on 2D      DexVS protease-sensitive hydrogel surfaces varying in VPMS      cross-linker density and resulting stiffness and stimulated      cultures with TGF-1 to promote MF differentiation. In      accordance with previous literature, we observed a      stiffness-dependent stepwise increase in cell proliferation      (day 5) and MF differentiation (day 9) as measured by Ki67      and -smooth muscle actin (-SMA) immunofluorescence,      respectively (Fig. 1E) (11). As the influence of matrix      elasticity on MF differentiation in 3D synthetic matrices has      not previously been documented, we also encapsulated NHLFs in      3D within identical DexVS hydrogels. The opposing trend with      respect to stiffness was noted for cells encapsulated in 3D;      compliant (E = 560 Pa) hydrogels that limited -SMA      expression in 2D plated cells instead exhibited the highest      levels of MF differentiation in 3D (Fig. 1F).      Decreasing proliferation and cell-cell contact formation as a      function of increasing hydrogel stiffness were also noted in      3D matrices and may be one reason why rigid hydrogels limit      differentiation in 3D. Similar findings have been reported      for mesenchymal stem cells encapsulated in hyaluronic acid      matrices, where compliant gels promoted stem cell      proliferation and yes-associated protein (YAP) activity in      3D, yet inhibited YAP activity and proliferation in 2D      (17). These results suggest that      while stiff, cross-linked 2D surfaces promote cell spreading,      proliferation, and MF differentiation, an equivalent      relationship does not directly translate to 3D settings. High      cross-linking and stiffness (E = 6.1 kPa) in 3D      matrices sterically hinder cell spreading, proliferation, and      the formation of cell-cell contacts, all well-established      promoters of MF differentiation (18).    
      Cell-degradable synthetic hydrogels with elastic moduli      approximating that of fibrotic tissue proved nonpermissive to      MF differentiation in 3D. Although matrix cross-linking and      densification of ground substance has previously been      implicated in fibrotic tissue stiffening, remodeled      collagenous architecture can also engender changes in tissue      mechanics and may modulate MF development in IPF      independently. To characterize the fibrous matrix      architecture within healthy and fibrotic lung interstitium,      we used second-harmonic generation (SHG) microscopy to      visualize collagen microstructure in saline- and      bleomycin-treated lungs, respectively. Per previous      literature, saline-treated lungs contained limited numbers of      micrometer-scale (~1-m-diameter) collagen fibers, primarily      localized to the interstitial spaces supporting the alveoli      (Fig. 2A) (19). In contrast,      bleomycin-treated lungs had, on average, fourfold higher      overall SHG intensity, with collagen fibers localized to both      an expanded interstitial region and in disrupted alveolar      networks. While no difference in fiber diameter was noted      with bleomycin treatment, we did observe thick (~2- to 5-m)      collagen bundles containing numerous individual fibers in      fibrotic lungs, potentially arising from physical remodeling      by resident fibroblasts (Fig. 2A and      fig. S1). Given that typical synthetic hydrogels amenable to      cell encapsulation (as in Fig. 1) lack      fibrous architecture, we leveraged a previously established      methodology for generating fiber-reinforced hydrogel      composites (20). Electrospun      DexVS fibers approximating the diameter of collagen fibers      characterized by SHG imaging (fig. S1) were co-encapsulated      alongside NHLFs in DexVS-VPMS hydrogel matrices, yielding a      3D interpenetrating network of DexVS fibers ensconced within      proteolytically cleavable DexVS hydrogel (Fig. 2B). To recapitulate the adhesive      nature of collagen and fibronectin fibers within interstitial      tissues, we functionalized DexVS fibers with RGD to support      integrin engagement and 3D cell spreading. While increasing      the weight % of type I collagen matrices increases collagen      fiber density and simultaneously increases hydrogel stiffness      (fig. S2), our synthetic matrix platform enables changes to      fiber density (0.0 to 5.0%) without altering mechanical      properties assessed by AFM nanoindentation (Fig. 2C), likely due to the constant      weight percentage of DexVS and VPMS cross-linker within the      bulk hydrogel.    
      (A) SHG imaging of collagen microstructure      within healthy and bleomycin-treated lungs on day 14, with      quantification of average signal intensity (arrows indicate      interstitial tissue regions adjacent to alveoli; n =      3 mice per group, n = 10 fields of view per group;      scale bar, 100 m). (B) Schematic depicting      polymer cross-linking and functionalization for generating      fibrous DexVS hydrogel composites to model changes in fiber      density within lung interstitial tissue ECM.      (C) Images and intensity quantification of      fluorophore-labeled fibers within composites varying in fiber      density (n = 4 samples per group, n = 10      fields of view per group; scale bar, 100 m). Youngs modulus      determined by AFM nanoindentation of fibrous composites      formed with different concentrations of VPMS cross-linker      (n = 4 samples per group, n = 20      measurements per group). (D) Representative      high-resolution images of NHLFs on day 1 in fibrous      composites formed with bulk hydrogels (12.5 mM VPMS)      functionalized with integrin ligand arginylglycylaspartic      acid (RGD) or heparin-binding peptide (HBP) [F-actin (cyan),      nuclei (yellow), and DexVS fibers (magenta); scale bar, 50      m]. Quantification of fiber recruitment as measured by      contact between cells and DexVS fibers (n = 10      fields of view per group, n > 25 cells analyzed).      (E) Representative high-resolution images of      NHLF on day 1 fibrous composites formed with bulk hydrogels      functionalized with integrin ligand RGD or HBP [F-actin      (cyan), fibronectin (yellow), and DexVS fibers (magenta);      scale bar, 5 m]. Quantification of fibronectin deposition      into tshe hydrogel matrix as measured by immunostain      intensity (n = 10 fields of view per group,      n > 25 cells analyzed). All data presented are      means  SDs with superimposed data points; asterisk denotes      significance with P < 0.05 determined by one-way      ANOVA or Students t test, where appropriate; NS      denotes nonsignificant comparison.    
      Beyond recapitulating the multiphase structural composition      of interstitial ECM, we also sought to mimic the adhesive      ligand presentation and protein sequestration functions of      native interstitial tissue. More specifically, the gel-like      ground substance within fibrotic tissue intrinsically lacks      integrin-binding moieties and is increasingly rich in heparan      sulfate proteoglycans, primarily serving as a local reservoir      for nascent ECM proteins, growth factors, and profibrotic      cytokines. In contrast, synthetic hydrogels are often      intentionally designed to have minimal interactions with      secreted proteins and require uniform functionalization with      a cell-adhesive ligand to support cell attachment and      mechanosensing. We hypothesized that RGD-presenting fibers      alone would support cell spreading (20), enabling the use of a      nonadhesive bulk DexVS hydrogel functionalized with      heparin-binding peptide (HBP; CGFAKLAARLYRKAG) (21). While both RGD- and      HBP-functionalized bulk DexVS gels supported cell spreading      upon incorporation of RGD-presenting fibers,      HBP-functionalized hydrogels encouraged matrix remodeling in      the form of cell-mediated fiber recruitment (Fig. 2D) and enhanced the deposition of      fibronectin fibrils into the adjacent matrix (Fig. 2E). Given the multiphase structure      of lung interstitium, changes in collagen fiber density noted      with fibrotic progression, and the importance of physical and      biochemical matrix remodeling to fibrogenesis, we used      HBP-tethered 560-Pa DexVS-VPMS bulk hydrogels with tunable      density of RGD-presenting fibers in all subsequent studies.    
      We next investigated whether changes in fiber density      reflecting fibrosis-associated alterations to matrix      architecture could influence MF differentiation in our 3D      model. NHLFs were encapsulated in compliant DexVS-VPMS      hydrogels ranging in fiber density (E = 560 Pa, 0.0      to 5.0 volume % fibers). Examining cell morphology after 3      days of culture, we noted increased cell spreading (Fig. 3, A and B) and evident F-actin      stress fibers (fig. S3) in fibrous conditions compared to      nonfibrous controls. Increased frequency of direct cell-cell      interactions was also observed as a function of fiber      density, as evidenced by higher area:perimeter ratios and the      number of fibroblasts per contiguous multicellular cluster      (Fig. 3A and fig. S3). As evidenced by      changes in the ratio of nuclear to cytosolic YAP      localization, we detected changes in mechanosensing as a      function of fiber density, with the highest nuclear ratio      measured in samples containing the highest fiber density      examined. Given that nuclear YAP activity (a transcriptional      coactivator required for downstream mechanotransduction) has      been implicated as a promoter of MF differentiation (22), we also assayed other      markers associated with fibroblast activation. With increases      in fiber density, we found significant increases in cell      proliferation and local fibronectin deposition (Fig. 3, A and B). Luminex quantification      of cytokine secretion at this time point revealed elevated      secretion of inflammatory and profibrotic cytokines (Fig. 3C), suggesting that matrix fibers      may modulate the soluble milieu known to regulate the      response to tissue damage and repair in vivo (2325). While no -SMA expression      or collagen deposition was observed at this early time point,      F-actin stress fibers, YAP activity, and fibronectin      expression have been previously established as proto-MF      markers in vivo (26),      suggesting that physical interactions with matrix fibers      prime fibroblasts for activation into MFs. Supplying the      profibrotic soluble factor TGF-1 prompted increases in the      expression of various profibrotic YAP-target genes      (ACTA2, COL1A1, FN1,      CD11, and CTGF) relative to nonfibrous (FD      0.0%) controls at day 5 (Fig. 3D).      Together, these data suggest that heightened fiber density      promotes a fibrotic phenotype (Fig. 3, A to C)      and gene expression (Fig. 3D), despite the      absence of a stiff surrounding hydrogel.    
      (A) Immunofluorescence images of NHLFs in      hydrogel composites over a range of fiber densities after 3      days of culture [F-actin (cyan), fibronectin (FN, yellow),      YAP (magenta), Ki67 (white), and nuclei (blue); scale bars,      100 m (F-actin), 20 m (FN), 20 m (YAP), and 100 m      (Ki67/nuclei)]. (B) Corresponding      image-based quantification of cell area, deposited FN, YAP      nuclear to cytosolic ratio, and % of proliferating cells      (n = 4 samples per group; for cell spread area      analysis, n > 50 cells per group; for FN, YAP,      and Ki67 analyses, n = 10 fields of view per group      and n > 25 cells per field of view).      (C) Cytokine secretion into culture medium      on day 3 (all data were normalized to background levels in      control medium, n = 4 samples per condition).      (D) Expression of MF-related genes in NHLFs      stimulated with TGF-1 on day 3, in either highly fibrous (FD      5.0%) or nonfibrous (FD 0.0%) hydrogels (data presented are      GAPDH-normalized fold changes relative to NHLFs within an FD      0% hydrogel lacking TGF-1 supplementation). All data      presented are means  SDs with superimposed data points;      asterisk denotes significance with P < 0.05      determined by one-way ANOVA or Students t test      where appropriate.    
      To explore whether fibrotic matrix cues in the form of      heightened fiber density could promote 3D MF differentiation      over longer-term culture, NHLFs were encapsulated within      hydrogels varying in fiber density and maintained in medium      supplemented with TGF-1 beginning on day 1.      Immunofluorescent imaging and cytokine quantification were      performed on days 3, 5, 7, and 9 to capture dynamic changes      in cellular phenotype and secretion, respectively. No      -SMApositive stress fibers or changes in total cytokine      secretion were observed on day 3 or 5. On day 7, we noted the      sparse appearance of -SMApositive cells alongside increased      total cytokine secretion (Fig. 4D) in FD      5.0% conditions containing TGF-1, indicating the beginning      of a potential phenotypic shift. Extensive MF differentiation      (designated by -SMApositive cells) and a sixfold increase      in total cytokine secretion occurred rapidly between days 7      and 9 (Fig. 4, B, D, and E) in the highest fiber      density (FD 5.0%) condition. Despite the high proliferation      within high fiber density hydrogels (Fig. 4C),      -SMApositive cells were not evident in samples lacking      exogenous TGF-1 supplementation. Moreover, -SMApositive      cells were also absent in TGF-1 supplemented conditions that      lacked fibrous architecture, indicating a requirement for      both soluble and physical fibrogenic cues in 3D. Furthermore,      inhibiting integrin engagement by incorporating fibers      lacking RGD also abrogated MF differentiation and      proliferation despite the presence of TGF-1 (Fig. 4, A and B), suggesting that a      fibrotic matrix architecture drives -SMA expression      primarily through integrin engagement and downstream      mechanosensing pathways. These results were replicated with      primary human dermal fibroblasts and mammary fibroblasts,      where similar trends with -SMA expression as a function of      fiber density were observed (fig. S4). While high fiber      density promoted proliferation in dermal fibroblasts, mammary      fibroblasts underwent MF differentiation in the absence of      higher proliferation rates, demonstrating intrinsic      differences between cell populations originating from      different tissues. Nevertheless, these results suggest that      fibrotic matrix architecture may be promoting MF      differentiation in other pathologies, namely, dermal scarring      in systemic sclerosis and desmoplasia in breast cancer.    
      (A) Representative immunofluorescence images      of NHLFs in microenvironmental conditions leading to low (top      row) or high (bottom row) MF differentiation after 9 days in      culture [-SMA (magenta) and nuclei (cyan); n = 4      samples per group, n = 10 fields of view per group,      and n > 50 cells per field of view; scale bar,      200 m], with corresponding image-based quantification in      (B) and (C). Insets depict      representative fiber densities. (D)      Measurement of total cytokine secretion over time as a      function of fiber density (n = 4 samples per      condition; * indicates significant differences between FD      5.0% and all other groups at a given time point; NS denotes      nonsignificant comparison). (E) Secretion of      specific cytokines and chemoattractants as a function of      fiber density on day 9 (n = 4 samples per      condition). (F) Representative images and      quantification of tissue contraction within day 14      fibroblast-laden hydrogels of varying fiber density      (n = 4 samples per group, dashed line indicates      initial diameter of 5 mm). Photo credit: Daniel Matera,      University of Michigan. (G) AFM measurements      of day 14 fibroblast-laden hydrogels of varying fiber density      (n = 20 measurements from n = 4 samples per      group). Dashed line indicates original hydrogel stiffness.      (H) SHG images of fibrous collagen within      fibroblast-laden hydrogels after 21 days of culture in medium      supplemented with ascorbic acid (scale bar, 100 m).      (I) Measurement of total collagen content      within digested DexVS hydrogels at day 21 as measured by      biochemical assay (n = 4 samples per group). All      data presented are means  SDs with superimposed data points;      asterisk denotes significance with P < 0.05      determined by one-way ANOVA; NS denotes nonsignificant      comparison.    
      While proliferation and -SMA expression are accepted markers      of activated fibroblasts, fibrotic lesions contribute to      patient mortality through airway inflammation, collagen      secretion, tissue contraction, and lung stiffeningpathogenic      events that hinder the physical process of respiration      (27). Luminex screening of 41      cytokines and chemokines within hydrogel supernatant revealed      elevated total cytokine secretion as a function of fiber      density over time (Fig. 4D), many of which      were soluble mediators known to regulate airway inflammation      (Fig. 4E) (23). Numerous other cytokines      were additionally secreted at day 9 but did not change as a      function of fiber density despite differences in cell number      at this time point (fig. S5), suggesting that cell number      alone cannot account for the increased cytokine secretion in      high fiber density conditions. By generating free-floating      hydrogels that allow contraction over time, we also examined      macroscale changes in tissue geometry. Consistent with the      influence of fiber density on -SMA expression, hydrogels      containing high fiber densities underwent greater hydrogel      contraction compared to nonfibrous or low fiber density      conditions (Fig. 4F). Day 14 fibrotic hydrogels      (FD 5.0%) were also fourfold stiffer (2.0 versus 0.5 kPa) as      measured by AFM nanoindentation (Fig. 4G)      compared to conditions that yielded low rates of MF      differentiation in shorter-term studies (i.e., FD 0.0 or FD      0.5% in Fig. 4, A and B). When medium was      supplemented with ascorbic acid to permit procollagen      hydroxylation, collagen deposition into the surrounding      matrix was evident by SHG microscopy by day 21 in high fiber      density hydrogels (Fig. 4H) as compared to      nonfibrous controls. Further biochemical analysis of hydrogel      collagen content confirmed a stepwise increase in collagen      production as a function of fiber density (Fig. 4I). Together, these findings      demonstrate a clear influence of fiber density on MF      differentiation and phenotype in 3D and furthermore suggest      that this in vitro model recapitulates key pathogenic events      associated with the progression of fibrosis in vivo.    
      Having established microenvironmental cues that promote      robust 3D MF differentiation, we next evaluated the potential      of our fibrous hydrogel model for use as an antifibrotic drug      screening platform. Nintedanib, a broad-spectrum receptor      tyrosine kinase inhibitor, and pirfenidone, an inhibitor of      the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK)/nuclear factor B      (NF-B) pathway, were selected due to their recent Food and      Drug Administration approval for use in patients with IPF      (28). We also included dimethyl      fumarate, an inhibitor of the YAP/TAZ pathway clinically      approved for treatment of systemic sclerosis, and marimastat,      a broad-spectrum MMP inhibitor that has shown efficacy in      murine preclinical models of fibrosis (29, 30). We generated fibrotic      matrices (560-Pa DexVS-VPMS-HBP bulk hydrogels containing 5.0      volume % DexVS-RGD fibers) that elicited the highest levels      of MF differentiation, matrix contraction, and collagen      secretion in our previous studies (Fig. 4).      As a comparison to the current standard for high-throughput      compound screening, we also seeded identical numbers of NHLFs      on 2D tissue culture plastic in parallel. Cultures were      stimulated with TGF-1 on day 1, and pharmacologic treatments      were added on day 3, following extensive fibroblast      spreading, cell-cell junction formation, and proliferation      (Fig. 3A).    
      As in our earlier studies, TGF-1 supplementation promoted      proliferation and -SMA expression within 3D constructs as      well as on rigid tissue culture plastic (Fig. 5A).      Nintedanib and pirfenidone had differential effects on NHLFs      depending on culture format; NHLFs on 2D tissue culture      plastic were resistant to pirfenidone/nintedanib treatment      with no difference in proliferation or -SMA expression      relative to vehicle controls, whereas modest but significant      decreases in -SMA expression (pirfenidone and nintedanib)      and proliferation (nintedanib) were detected in 3D (Fig. 5, A to E). Combined treatment with      pirfenidone and nintedanib provided an antifibrotic effect      only in fibrotic matrices, supporting ongoing clinical      studies exploring their use as a combinatorial therapy      (ClinicalTrials.gov      identifier       NCT03939520). Dimethyl fumarate abrogated cell      proliferation and -SMA expression across all conditions,      suggesting that inhibition of downstream mechanosensing      inhibits MF differentiation in both 2D and 3D contexts in      support of the general requirement for mechanosensing during      MF differentiation independent of culture substrate (11). Inhibition of YAP activity      in vivo has been shown to mitigate fibrosis and may be an      advantageous therapeutic target (22). Blockade of MMP activity      via marimastat treatment proved ineffectual in reducing -SMA      expression or proliferation on 2D tissue culture plastic, but      surprisingly fully abrogated the proliferation and      differentiation response in 3D fibrotic matrices (Fig. 5, A to E). Given the role of      protease activity in tissue remodeling in vivo (30) and in cellular outgrowth      within 3D hydrogels (17, 31), our data suggest that      degradative matrix remodeling is a requirement for MF      differentiation in 3D, but not in more simplified 2D      settings. To summarize, multiple antifibrotic agents      (pirfenidone, nintedanib, dimethyl fumarate, and marimastat)      demonstrating efficacy in clinical literature elicited an      antifibrotic effect in our engineered fibrotic pulmonary      interstitial matrices, but not in the 2D tissue culture      plastic contexts traditionally used for compound screening.    
      (A) Representative confocal images stained      for -SMA (magenta), F-actin (cyan), and nuclei (yellow) of      NHLFs after 9 days of culture on tissue culture plastic (TCP)      (top row) or 3D fibrotic matrices (bottom row) with      pharmacologic treatment indicated from days 3 to 9 (scale      bar, 100 m). Imaged regions were selected to maximize the      number of -SMA+ cells per field of view within      each sample. (B) Quantification of -SMA and      (C) total cell count within 2D NHLF      cultures. (D) Quantification of -SMA and      (E) total cell count within 3D fibrotic      matrices (n = 4 samples per group, n = 10      fields of view per group, and n > 50 cells per      field of view). All data presented are means  SDs with      superimposed data points; asterisk denotes significance with      P < 0.05 determined by one-way ANOVA; NS denotes      nonsignificant comparison.    
      As the protease inhibitor marimastat fully ablated      TGF-1induced -SMA expression and proliferation in our 3D      fibrotic matrices, we leveraged bioinformatics methodologies      to investigate the role of matrix proteases in patients with      IPF on a network (Reactome) and protein (STRING) basis.      Differential expression analysis of microarray data within      the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) Gene      Expression Omnibus (GEO) (dataset #GSE47460) was used to      generate an uncurated/unbiased dataset composed of the top      1000 differentially regulated genes in IPF, revealing      MMP1 as the most up-regulated gene in patients with      IPF, with other matrix proteases (MMP1,      MMP3, MMP7, MMP9, MMP10,      MMP11, and MMP12) and matrix remodeling      proteins (COL1A2, LOX, ACAN,      DCN, and HS6ST2) similarly up-regulated      (Fig. 6B, table S1, and data file S1). To      focus on genes associated with MF differentiation for      subsequent analyses, we performed Gene Ontology (GO) term      enrichment (via GEO2R) to compile a curated dataset      containing 188 key genes associated with MF differentiation      (data file S1) and used Reactome and STRING analyses to      investigate network signaling within both the uncurated and      curated datasets. Analyses revealed 103 (uncurated) and 89      (curated) enriched signaling pathways in IPF (data file S1).      The top 3/5 (uncurated) and 5/5 (curated) significantly      enriched pathways in IPF involved matrix degradation and      remodeling (Fig. 6C). Subsequent STRING      protein-protein interaction analysis of datasets revealed      that top signaling nodes were MMPs (uncurated: MMP1      and MMP3; Fig. 6D), fibrous      collagens (uncurated: COL1A2 and COL3A1),      or cytokines (curated: IL6, VEGFA,      IL1B, and IGF1; Fig. 6D) known      to increase MMP expression in fibroblasts (3235). These results emphasize the      interdependence between MMP activity and systems-level      pathogenic signaling in IPF and, in combination with our 3D      drug screening results, highlight fibroblast-specific      protease activity as a potential therapeutic target.      Furthermore, given that protease inhibition had no effect on      MF differentiation in 2D culture, these data also support the      growing sentiment that simplified 2D screening models may be      masking the identification of potentially viable      antifibrotics.    
      (A) Schematic representation of      bioinformatics workflow: Whole-genome transcriptomes from 91      healthy and 140 patients with lung fibrosis were fetched from      the NCBI GEO. Differential expression analysis was used to      assemble an uncurated list of the top 1000 differentially      expressed genes. GO enrichment of choice biological pathways      was used to assemble a curated list of genes associated with      MF differentiation. Datasets were fed through a previous      knowledgebased analysis pipeline to identify enriched      signaling pathways (Reactome) and key protein signaling nodes      (STRING) within patients with IPF. (B)      Heatmaps of the top 20 differentially expressed genes within      specified GO categories, which were manually selected for      curated analysis. CN values indicate a      high degree of interaction between proteins selected for      curated analysis. Colors are based on differential expression      values that were not log-normalized. (C)      Summary of the top 5 significantly enriched pathways in the      curated and uncurated gene set. (D)      Representative STRING diagram depicting protein interactions      within the curated dataset, with summary of the top 5      signaling nodes in the uncurated and curated gene set. Blue      nodes and edges represent interactions within the top 5      signaling nodes for the curated dataset.    
    Despite fibrosis widely contributing to mortality worldwide,    inadequate understanding of fibrotic disease pathogenesis has    limited the development of efficacious therapies (12). Preclinical studies in vivo,    while indispensable, often fail to translate to clinical    settings as evidenced by the failure of ~90% of drugs    identified in animal studies (36). In addition, limitations in    current technologies (e.g., the embryonic lethality of many    genetic ECM knockouts and the limited resolution/imaging depth    of intravital microscopy) have hindered the application of    preclinical in vivo models for the study of cell-ECM    interactions that underlie fibrogenesis (37). In contrast, existing in    vitro models use patient-derived cells that are affordable,    scalable, and amenable to microscopy, but often fail to    recapitulate the complex 3D matrix structure of the    interstitial tissue regions where fibrotic diseases such as IPF    originate. We leveraged electrospinning and bio-orthogonal    chemistries to engineer novel pulmonary interstitial matrices    that are 3D and have fibrous architecture with biomimetic    ligand presentation. In the presence of profibrotic soluble    factors, these settings reproduce hallmarks of fibrosis at    cellular and tissue levels (Figs. 2 to 4). Examining the influence of physical    microenvironmental cues (cross-linking/stiffness and fiber    density) on MF differentiation, we find that    cross-linking/stiffness has opposing effects on MF    differentiation in 2D versus 3D (Fig. 1) and that    incorporation of a fibrous architecture in 3D is a prerequisite    to MF differentiation (Fig. 4). Furthermore,    supported by the importance of protease signaling in IPF    (Fig. 6), we performed proof-of-concept    pharmacologic screening within our 3D fibrotic matrices (Fig. 5) and highlighted enhanced biomimicry    as compared to traditional 2D drug screening substrates where    matrix remodeling appears to be dispensable for MF    differentiation.  
    While tunable synthetic hydrogels have identified    mechanosensing pathways critical to MF differentiation in 2D,    these observations have yet to be translated to 3D fibrous    settings relevant to the interstitial spaces where fibrosis    originates. Given that late-stage IPF progresses in the absence    of external tissue damage, current dogma implicates fibrotic    matrix stiffness as the continual driver of MF differentiation    in vivo (10, 11, 38). While we cannot disregard    this hypothesis, our work elucidates a contrasting    MMP-dependent mechanism at play in 3D, whereby a compliant,    degradable, and fibrous matrix architecture supports MF    differentiation, with matrix contraction and stiffening    occurring downstream of -SMA expression, nearly a week later.    Given numerous 2D studies indicating matrix stiffness as a    driver of MF differentiation, the finding that a compliant    matrix promotes MF differentiation may appear counterintuitive    (10, 11). However, MF accumulation has    been documented before tissue stiffening in human disease    (3), and a recent phase 2 clinical    trial (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:        NCT01769196) targeting the LOX pathway (the family of    enzymes responsible for matrix stiffening in vivo) failed to    prevent disease progression in patients with IPF and was    terminated due to lack of efficacy (39). Furthermore, compelling    recent work by Fiore et al. (3) combined immunohistochemistry    with high-resolution AFM to characterize human IPF tissue    mechanics and found that regions of active fibrogenesis were    highly fibrous but had a similar Youngs modulus as healthy    tissue. In concert with our in vitro data, these findings    suggest that MF differentiation is possible within soft    provisional ECM in vivo and that the initiation of fibrogenesis    may not be dependent on heightened tissue stiffness so long as    matrix fibers and appropriate soluble cues (e.g., TGF-1) are    present.  
    Consequently, understanding the source of profibrotic soluble    cues in vivo is of critical importance when identifying    therapeutic targets for IPF. Luminex screening of supernatant    from 3D fibrotic matrices revealed sixfold increases in    cytokine secretion during fibrogenesis, most of which were    potent inflammatory factors [e.g., granulocyte-macrophage    colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), interleukin-6 (IL-6), IL-8,    and vascular endothelial growth factor A (VEGF-A)] and    chemoattractants (e.g., CCL2, CCL7, CCL11, and CXCL1) (Fig. 4E). Furthermore, IL-6 and VEGF-A were    found to be major signaling nodes in patients with IPF (Fig. 6D). While not typically regarded as an    immunomodulatory cell population, these findings suggest that    MFs may maintain localized inflammation to support continual    fibrogenesis. Mitogens such as IL-6 and IL-8 promote    endothelial- and epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition, a    process that gives rise to matrix-producing MF-like cells in    IPF (40). CCR2 (CCL2 and CCL7) and    CXCR1 (CXCL1 and IL-8) ligation facilitates macrophage    chemotaxis, potentially leading to a sustained influx of    TGF-1producing cells in IPF, and glycoproteins such as GM-CSF    inhibit caspase activity in mononuclear cells, potentially    preventing apoptotic events required for the resolution of    wound repair and return to homeostasis (23, 41). In addition, secretion of    nearly all cytokines was increased as a function of fiber    density, highlighting a potential feed-forward loop distinct    from canonical TGF-1 signaling. Further model development    (e.g., coculture platforms) will be required to examine these    hypotheses and the role of MF-derived cytokines in persistent    inflammation and fibrosis.  
    In addition to documenting the role of fibrotic matrix    architecture in 3D fibrogenesis, we demonstrate    proof-of-concept pharmacologic screening within our synthetic    pulmonary interstitial matrices and highlight their improved    relevance to human disease. Previous work in vitro has    documented profound reductions in MF differentiation after    treatment with clinically approved antifibrotics (pirfenidone    and nintedanib), whereas in the clinic, pirfenidone and    nintedanib impede disease progression but are far from curative    (4, 28, 42, 43). Pirfenidone or nintedanib had    insignificant effects in 2D settings in our hands and only    modest effects in 3D (Fig. 5). One reason for this    discrepancy may be the use of supraphysiologic pirfenidone and    nintedanib concentrations in previous in vitro studies, whereas    we selected dosages based on plasma concentrations in patients    with IPF (44). Differences in    pharmacokinetics, nutrient/growth factor diffusion, and cell    metabolism between 2D and 3D tissue constructs likely also play    a role. Furthermore, as evidenced by the preventative effect of    the protease inhibitor marimastat in 3D hydrogels but not 2D    settings (Fig. 5), pharmacologics that influence    matrix degradation and remodeling are likely to have a    minimized effect in 2D settings due to the less dynamic nature    of tissue culture plastic and flat hydrogels (45). Nintedanib and pirfenidone    have been shown to influence protease activity and matrix    remodeling in vivo (16), and may    be mediating their effects within fibrotic matrices through    modulation of ECM remodeling. Given the identification of    numerous potential antifibrotic agents (microRNA, TGF-1    inhibitors, IL-4, IL-13 neutralizing antibodies, and integrin    blockers) in preclinical models, application of the system    described here could elucidate how choice pharmacologics affect    MF differentiation and matrix remodeling processes that are    difficult to recapitulate in 2D culture. Further development of    our interstitial matrices as an arrayed platform, as has been    elegantly implemented with collagen matrices (42), is a critical next step to    moving this technology toward high-throughput screening    applications.  
    It is important to note that this work has several potential    limitations. Our material approach allows facile control of    initial microenvironmental conditions (e.g., dimensionality,    fiber density, ligand density, and elastic modulus), and of    note, composites of RGD-bearing nondegradable fibers and    degradable bulk hydrogel decouple degradation-induced changes    in matrix mechanics and ligand availability. However, we have    no experimental control over subsequent dynamic cell-driven    remodeling events (e.g., MMP-mediated hydrogel softening,    fibronectin and collagen deposition, and hydrogel    contraction/stiffening from resident cells) that likely affect    local matrix mechanics, cellular mechanosensing, and MF    differentiation. Exciting recent technologies such as 3D    traction force microscopy (TFM) and magnetic bead microrheology    could enable future examination of how these dynamic changes in    cell-scale mechanics potentiate MF differentiation in 3D. Along    similar lines, although our study suggests a requirement for    initial adhesion to the surrounding matrix, how the dynamics of    ligand presentation due to matrix remodeling regulates    mechanosensing was not explored here. We present this platform    as a reductionist approach to modeling the activation of    fibroblasts within the 3D fibrous interstitia associated with    fibrosis, a pathology that develops over years in vivo and    involves multiple cell types. Human pulmonary tissue and    fibrotic foci, in particular, also have viscoelastic and    nonlinear mechanical behaviors (3,    46) that were not explored in our    AFM measurements of murine lung or hydrogel composites. Given    the important role such mechanical features can play in ECM    mechanosensing, incorporating new synthetic material strategies    in combination with cell-scale mechanical measurements will be    essential to modeling physiologic complexity. Given that the    development of lung organoids is still in its infancy,    decellularized precision-cut lung slices currently represent    the best culture platform to capture the full complexity of the    lung microenvironment (5).  
    In summary, we designed a tunable 3D and fibrous hydrogel model    that recapitulates dynamic physical (e.g., stiffening and    contraction) and biochemical (e.g., secretion of fibronectin,    collagen, and cytokines) alterations to the microenvironment    observed during the progression of IPF. Implementation of our    model allowed us to establish a developing mechanism for MF    differentiation in 3D compliant environments, whereby cell    spreading upon matrix fibers drives YAP activity, cytokine    release, and proteolysis-dependent MF differentiation.    Furthermore, we leveraged bioinformatics techniques to explore    protease signaling in clinical IPF and, in concert with our    therapeutic screening data, establish a strong role for    proteases during IPF pathogenesis and in 3D MF differentiation.    Whether protease activity promoted MF differentiation directly    through modulation of intracellular signaling or indirectly    through affects on the local matrix environment has yet to be    explored in these settings but will be the focus of future    efforts. Consequently, these results highlight critical design    parameters (3D degradability and matrix architecture)    frequently overlooked in established synthetic models of MF    differentiation. Future work incorporating macrophages,    endothelial cells, and epithelial cells may expand current    understanding of how developing MF populations influence    otherwise homeostatic cells and how matrix remodeling    influences paracrine signaling networks and corresponding drug    response. Given the low translation rate of drugs identified in    high-throughput screening assays, we show that the application    and development of engineered biomimetics, in combination with    preclinical models, can improve drug discovery and    pathophysiological understanding.  
      All reagents were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich and used as      received, unless otherwise stated.    
        Dextran vinyl        sulfone. A previously described protocol for        vinyl sulfonating polysaccharides was adapted for use with        linear highmolecular weight (MW) dextran (MW 86,000 Da; MP        Biomedicals, Santa Ana, CA) (20). Briefly, pure divinyl        sulfone (12.5 ml; Thermo Fisher Scientific, Hampton, NH)        was added to a sodium hydroxide solution (0.1 M, 250 ml)        containing dextran (5 g). This reaction was carried out at        1500 rpm for 3.5 min, after which the reaction was        terminated by adjusting the pH to 5.0 via the addition of        hydrochloric acid. A lower functionalization of DexVS was        used for hydrogels, where the volume of divinyl sulfone        reagent was reduced to 3.875 ml. All reaction products were        dialyzed for 5 days against Milli-Q ultrapure water, with        two water exchanges daily, and then lyophilized for 3 days        to obtain the pure product. Functionalization of DexVS was        characterized by 1H nuclear magnetic resonance        (NMR) spectroscopy in D2O and was calculated as        the ratio of the proton integral [6.91 parts per million        (ppm)] and the anomeric proton of the glucopyranosyl ring        (5.166 and 4.923 ppm); here, vinyl sulfone/dextran repeat        unit ratios of 0.376 and 0.156 were determined for        electrospinning and hydrogel DexVS polymers, respectively.      
      DexVS was dissolved at 0.6 g ml1 in a 1:1 mixture      of Milli-Q ultrapure water and dimethylformamide with 0.015%      Irgacure 2959 photoinitiator. Methacrylated rhodamine (0.5      mM; Polysciences Inc., Warrington, PA) was incorporated into      the electrospinning solution to fluorescently visualize      fibers under 555 laser. This polymer solution was used for      electrospinning within an environment-controlled glovebox      held at 21C and 30% relative humidity. Electrospinning was      performed at a flow rate of 0.3 ml hour1, gap      distance of 5 cm, and voltage of 10.0 kV onto a grounded      collecting surface attached to a linear actuator. Fiber      layers were collected on glass slabs and primary cross-linked      under ultraviolet light (100 mW cm2) and then      secondary cross-linked (100 mW cm2) in an      Irgacure 2959 solution (1 mg ml1). After      polymerization, fiber segments were resuspended in a known      volume of phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) (typically 3 ml).      The total volume of fibers was then calculated via a      conservation of volume equation: total resulting solution      volume = volume of fibers + volume of PBS (3 ml). After      calculating total fiber volume, solutions were      re-centrifuged, supernatant was removed, and fiber pellets      were resuspended to create a 10 volume % fiber solution,      which were then aliquoted and stored at 4C. To support cell      adhesion, 2.0 mM RGD was coupled to vinyl sulfone groups      along the DexVS backbone via Michael-type addition chemistry      for 30 min, followed by quenching of excess VS groups in a      300 mM cysteine solution for 30 min.    
      DexVS gels were formed via a thiol-ene click reaction at 3.3%      (w/v) (pH 7.4, 37C, 45 min) with VPMS cross-linker (12.5,      20, and 27.5 mM) (GCRDVPMSMRGGDRCG, GenScript, George Town,      KY) in the presence of varying amounts of      arginylglycylaspartic acid (RGD, CGRGDS, 2.0 mM; GenScript,      George Town, KY), HBP (GCGAFAKLAARLYRKA, 1.0 mM; GenScript,      George Town, KY), and fiber segments (0.0 to 5.0%, v/v). For      experiments comparing hydrogels of varying ligand type (1 mM      HBP versus 2 mM RGD), cysteine was added to precursor      solutions to maintain a final vinyl sulfone concentration of      60 mM. All hydrogel and peptide precursor solutions were made      in PBS containing 50 mM Hepes. To create fibrous hydrogels, a      defined stock solution (10% v/v) of suspended fibers in      PBS/Hepes was mixed into hydrogel precursor solutions before      gelation. By controlling the dilution of the fiber      suspension, fiber density was readily tuned within the      hydrogel at a constant hydrogel weight percentage. For gel      contraction experiments, DexVS was polymerized within a      5-mm-diameter polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) gasket to ensure      consistent hydrogel area on day 0.    
      NHLFs (University of Michigan Central Biorepository), normal      human dermal fibroblasts (Lonza, Basel, Switzerland), and      normal human mammary fibroblasts (Sciencal, Carlsbad, CA)      were cultured in Dulbeccos modified Eagles medium      containing 1% penicillin/streptomycin, l-glutamine, and 10% fetal bovine serum (Atlanta      Biologicals, Flowery Branch, GA). NHLFs derived from three      separate donors were used for experiments. Cells were      passaged upon achieving 90% confluency at a 1:4 ratio and      used for studies until passage 7. For all hydrogel studies,      cells were trypsinized, counted and either encapsulated into      or seeded onto 25-l hydrogels at a density of 1,000,000      cells ml1 of hydrogel, and subsequently cultured      at 37C and 5% CO2 in serum-containing medium. For      studies comparing 3D hydrogels to tissue culture plastic, the      number of cells seeded into 2D conditions was analogous to      the total cell number within hydrogel matrices. Medium was      refreshed the day after encapsulation and every 2 days after.      In selected experiments, recombinant human TGF-1 (5 ng/ml;      PeproTech, Rocky Hill, NJ) was supplemented into the medium      at 5 ng ml1. For pharmacological studies,      nintedanib (50 nM; Thermo Fisher Scientific, Hampton, NH),      pirfenidone (100 M; Thermo Fisher Scientific, Hampton, NH),      marimastat (1.0 M), and dimethyl fumarate (100 nM) were      supplemented in serum-containing medium and refreshed every 2      days.    
      Cultures were fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde for 30 min at      room temperature. To stain the actin cytoskeleton and nuclei,      samples were permeabilized in PBS solution containing Triton      X-100 (5%, v/v), sucrose (10%, w/v), and magnesium chloride      (0.6%, w/v); blocked in 1% bovine serum albumin (BSA); and      stained simultaneously with phalloidin and      4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI). For immunostaining,      samples were permeabilized, blocked for 8 hours in 1% (w/v)      BSA, and incubated with mouse monoclonal anti-YAP antibody      (1:1000; Santa Cruz Biotechnology, SC-101199), mouse      monoclonal anti-fibronectin antibody (FN, 1:2000;      Sigma-Aldrich, #F6140), rabbit monoclonal anti-Ki67 (1:500;      Sigma-Aldrich #PIMA514520), or mouse monoclonal anti-SMA      (1:2000; Sigma-Aldrich, #A2547) followed by secondary      antibody for 6 hours each at room temperature with 3 PBS      washes in between. High-resolution images of YAP, FN, and      actin morphology were acquired with a 40 objective. Unless      otherwise specified, images are presented as maximum      intensity projections of 100-m Z-stacks. Hydrogel samples      were imaged on a Zeiss LSM 800 laser scanning confocal      microscope. SHG imaging of lung tissue was conducted on a      Leica SPX8 laser scanning confocal microscope with an      excitation wavelength of 820 nm and a collection window of      400 to 440 nm. Single-cell morphometric analyses (cell spread      area) were performed using custom Matlab scripts with sample      sizes >50 cells per group, while YAP, -SMA, Ki67, and FN      immunostains were quantified on an image basis with a total      of 10 frames of view. MFs were denoted as nucleated,      F-actin+, -SMA+ cells. For cell      density (number of nuclei) calculations, DAPI-stained cell      nuclei were thresholded and counted in six separate 600 m       600 m  200 m image volumes, allowing us to calculate a      total number of cells per mm3 of gel. Fiber      recruitment analysis was conducted via a custom Matlab      script; briefly, cell outlines were created via actin masking      and total fiber fluorescence was quantified under each actin      mask on a per-cell basis. A similar analysis method using      Matlab was used for cell-cell junction analysis as published      previously, with higher area:perimeter ratios and      clusters/cell indicative as more pronounced network formation      (47).    
      For all experiments, additional hydrogel replicates were      finely minced and degraded in dextranase solution (4 IU/ml;      Sigma-Aldrich) for 20 min and homogenized in buffer RLT      (Qiagen, Venlo, The Netherlands), and RNA was isolated      according to the manufacturers protocols. Complementary DNA      (cDNA) was generated from deoxyribonuclease (DNase)free RNA      and amplified, and gene expression was normalized to the      housekeeping gene glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase      (GAPDH). Experiments were run with technical triplicates      across three individual biological experiments. For a      complete list of primers, see table S2.    
      To determine the elastic modulus of lung tissue and DexVS      hydrogels, indentation tests were used with a Nanosurf      FlexBio AFM (Nanosurf, Liestal, Switzerland). Samples were      indented via a 5-m bead at a depth of 10 m and an      indentation rate of 0.333 m/s. Resulting force-displacement      curves were fit to a spherical Hertz model using AtomicJ.      Poissons ratios of 0.5 and 0.4 were used for hydrogels and      lung tissue, respectively.    
      All animal studies were approved by the Animal Care and Use      Committee at the University of Michigan. Bleomycin (0.025 U;      Sigma-Aldrich) was instilled intratracheally in C57BL6 mice      (8 weeks of age; The Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, ME, USA)      on day 0. Briefly, mice were anesthetized with sodium      pentobarbital, the trachea was exposed and entered with a      30-gauge needle under direct visualization, and a single      30-l injection containing 0.025 U of bleomycin      (Sigma-Aldrich) diluted in normal saline was injected. Lungs      were collected on day 14 for mechanical and histological      analysis. For histology samples, lungs were perfused with      saline and inflated with 4% paraformaldehyde, sectioned, and      stained with picrosirius red. For mechanical characterization      via AFM, lungs were perfused with saline, infused with OCT      (optimal cutting temperature) compound (Thermo Fisher      Scientific), and flash-frozen in a slurry of dry ice and      ethanol. Sections were mechanically tested via AFM      nanoindentation immediately upon thawing.    
      To characterize the inflammatory secretome associated with      various DexVS-VPMS environments, medium was collected from      NHLF cultures 3, 5, 7, and 9 days after encapsulation. A      Luminex FlexMAP 3D (Luminex Corporation, Austin, TX) systems      technology was used to measure 41 cytokines/chemokines      (HCTYMAG-60 K-PX41, Milliplex, EMD Millipore Corporation) in      the medium samples according to the manufacturers      instructions. Total secretion was reported as the sum of all      41 analytes measured for each respective condition.      Cell-secreted collagen was measured using the established      colorimetric Sircol assay in hydrogels cultured with      serum-free medium in the presence of ascorbic acid (25 g      ml1).    
      The NCBI GEO database was consulted [dataset GSE47460      (GP14550)] to fetch gene expression data from 91 healthy      patients and 140 patients with IPF; patients with chronic      obstructive pulmonary disease and nonidiopathic fibrotic lung      diseases were excluded from the analysis (48). GEO2R (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/geo2r/)      software was used for GO term enrichment, with keywords ECM,      MMP, integrin, cytoskeleton, cytokine, chemokine, and MAPK      used as search terms for dataset curation (48). Noncurated datasets were      composed of the top 1000 differentially expressed genes      between healthy and interstitial lung disease (ILD)      conditions. Differential expression was calculated on the      basis of subtracting normalized expression values between      diseased and healthy patients. All genes were normalized      before analysis with GEO2R via a pairwise cyclic losses      approach. For pathway and protein-protein enrichment      analyses, a curated pathway database [Reactome (49)] and Search Tool for      Retrieval of Interacting Genes/Proteins [STRING (50)] methodology were consulted,      respectively. For STRING analyses, up-regulated genes within      the druggable genome were focused upon. A tabulated list of      top genes, pathways, and nodes can be seen in data file S1.    
      Statistical significance was determined by one-way analysis      of variance (ANOVA) or Students t test where      appropriate, with significance indicated by P <      0.05. All data are presented as means  SD.    
  Acknowledgments: We thank E. S. White  (University of Michigan) for providing patient-derived lung  fibroblasts used in these studies. Funding: This  work was supported, in part, by the NIH (HL124322, R35HL144481).  D.L.M. and C.D.D. acknowledge financial support from the NSF  Graduate Research Fellowship Program (DGE1256260). Author  contributions: D.L.M. and B.M.B. conceived and  supervised the project. D.L.M. designed and performed the  experiments. K.M.D. and K.B.A. performed and aided in analysis of  the Luminex experiments. M.R.S. and C.D.D. helped with data  analysis. R.P. and M.S. aided in polymer syntheses and microfiber  fabrication. I.M.L. provided equipment for and assisted in  polymerase chain reaction experiments. C.A.W. and B.B.M. helped  perform the animal experiments for the bleomycin-induced lung  fibrosis model. All authors edited and approved the manuscript.  Competing interests: The authors declare that  they have no competing interests. Data and materials  availability: All data needed to evaluate the  conclusions in the paper are present in the paper and/or the  Supplementary Materials. Additional data related to this paper  may be requested from the authors.
View post:
Microengineered 3D pulmonary interstitial mimetics highlight a critical role for matrix degradation in myofibroblast differentiation - Science...