Vascular stiffness is an independent predictor of human vascular diseases and is linked to ischemia, diabetes, high blood pressure, hyperlipidemia, and/or aging. Blood vessel stiffening increases owing to changes in the microscale architecture and/or content of extracellular, cytoskeletal, and nuclear matrix proteins. These alterations, while best appreciated in large blood vessels, also gradually occur in the microvasculature and play an important role in the initiation and progression of numerous microangiopathies including diabetic retinopathy. Although macroscopic measurements of arterial stiffness by pulse wave velocity are often used for clinical diagnosis, stiffness changes of intact microvessels and their causative factors have not been characterized. Herein, we describe the use of atomic force microscopy (AFM) to determine stiffness of mouse retinal capillaries and assess its regulation by the cellular communication network (CCN) 1, a stiffness-sensitive gene-encoded matricellular protein. AFM yields reproducible measurements of retinal capillary stiffness in lightly fixed freshly isolated retinal flat mounts. AFM measurements also show significant changes in compliance properties of the retinal microvasculature of mice with endothelial-specific deletion of CCN1, indicating that CCN1 expression, or lack thereof, affects the mechanical properties of microvascular cells in vivo. Thus, AFM has the force sensitivity and the spatial resolution necessary to measure the local modulus of retinal capillaries in situ and eventually to investigate microvascular compliance heterogeneities as key components of disease pathogenesis.
Keywords: Atomic force microscopy; CCN1; Elastic modulus; Microvasculature; Retina.
© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.