TY - JOUR
T1 - Matrix-Guided Vascular-like Cord Formation by MRC-5 Lung Fibroblasts
T2 - Evidence of Structural and Transcriptional Plasticity
AU - Theodoroula, Nikoleta F.
AU - Giannopoulos-Dimitriou, Alexandros
AU - Saiti, Aikaterini
AU - Papadimitriou-Tsantarliotou, Aliki
AU - Miliotou, Androulla N.
AU - Vatsellas, Giannis
AU - Sarigiannis, Yiannis
AU - Galatou, Eleftheria
AU - Petrou, Christos
AU - Fatouros, Dimitrios G.
AU - Vizirianakis, Ioannis S.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 by the authors.
PY - 2025/10
Y1 - 2025/10
N2 - The role of mesenchymal-to-endothelial transition in the angiogenic response remains controversial. In this study, we investigated whether human fetal lung fibroblasts (MRC-5 cells) exhibit morphological plasticity in a biomimetic extracellular matrix environment. To this end, MRC-5 cells were first cultured on and within Matrigel hydrogel and then studied with tube formation assays, confocal/fluorescence microscopy, invasion assays, and transcriptomic profiling. In addition, quantitative assessment for cord formation and gene expression was conducted via qPCR and RNA sequencing. In this study, MRC-5 cells quickly self-organized into cord-like networks, resembling early stages of vascular patterning, and at higher densities, invaded the hydrogel and formed spheroid-like aggregates. Transcriptomic analysis revealed upregulation of genes related to nervous system development and synaptic signaling in Matrigel-grown MRC-5 cultures. Collectively, these findings suggest that MRC-5 fibroblasts display structural and transcriptional plasticity in 3D Matrigel cultures, forming vascular-like cords that are more likely to resemble early developmental morphologies or neuroectodermal-like transcriptional signatures than definitive endothelial structures. This work underscores the potential of fibroblasts as an alternative cell source for vascular tissue engineering and highlights a strategy to overcome current limitations in autologous endothelial cell availability for regenerative applications.
AB - The role of mesenchymal-to-endothelial transition in the angiogenic response remains controversial. In this study, we investigated whether human fetal lung fibroblasts (MRC-5 cells) exhibit morphological plasticity in a biomimetic extracellular matrix environment. To this end, MRC-5 cells were first cultured on and within Matrigel hydrogel and then studied with tube formation assays, confocal/fluorescence microscopy, invasion assays, and transcriptomic profiling. In addition, quantitative assessment for cord formation and gene expression was conducted via qPCR and RNA sequencing. In this study, MRC-5 cells quickly self-organized into cord-like networks, resembling early stages of vascular patterning, and at higher densities, invaded the hydrogel and formed spheroid-like aggregates. Transcriptomic analysis revealed upregulation of genes related to nervous system development and synaptic signaling in Matrigel-grown MRC-5 cultures. Collectively, these findings suggest that MRC-5 fibroblasts display structural and transcriptional plasticity in 3D Matrigel cultures, forming vascular-like cords that are more likely to resemble early developmental morphologies or neuroectodermal-like transcriptional signatures than definitive endothelial structures. This work underscores the potential of fibroblasts as an alternative cell source for vascular tissue engineering and highlights a strategy to overcome current limitations in autologous endothelial cell availability for regenerative applications.
KW - cord-like formation
KW - fibroblast plasticity
KW - Matrigel
KW - tissue engineering
KW - transcriptomic remodeling
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105018648130
U2 - 10.3390/cells14191519
DO - 10.3390/cells14191519
M3 - Article
C2 - 41090748
AN - SCOPUS:105018648130
SN - 2073-4409
VL - 14
JO - Cells
JF - Cells
IS - 19
M1 - 1519
ER -