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Matrix-associated extracellular vesicles modulate human smooth muscle cell adhesion and directionality by presenting collagen VI

Kapustin, Alexander N., Tsakali, Sofia Serena, Whitehead, Meredith, Chennell, George, Wu, Meng-Ying, Molenaar, Chris, Kutikhin, Anton, Chen, Yimeng, Ahmad, Sadia, Bogdanov, Leo, Sinitsky, Maxim, Rubina, Kseniya, Clayton, Aled ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3087-9226, Verweij, Frederik J., Pegtel, Dirk Michiel, Zingaro, Simona, Lobov, Arseniy, Zainullina, Bozhana, Owen, Dylan, Parsons, Maddy, Cheney, Richard E., Warren, Derek T., Humphries, Martin James, Iskratsch, Thomas, Holt, Mark and Shanahan, Catherine M. 2025. Matrix-associated extracellular vesicles modulate human smooth muscle cell adhesion and directionality by presenting collagen VI. eLife 12 , RP90375. 10.7554/elife.90375.3

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Abstract

The extracellular matrix (ECM) supports blood vessel architecture and functionality and undergoes active remodelling during vascular repair and atherogenesis. Vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) are essential for vessel repair and, via their secretome, can invade from the vessel media into the intima to mediate ECM remodelling. Accumulation of fibronectin (FN) is a hallmark of early vascular repair and atherosclerosis. Here, we show that FN stimulates human VSMCs to secrete small extracellular vesicles (sEVs) by activating the β1 integrin/FAK/Src pathway as well as Arp2/3-dependent branching of the actin cytoskeleton. We found that sEVs are trapped by the ECM in vitro and colocalise with FN in symptomatic atherosclerotic plaques in vivo. Functionally, ECM-trapped sEVs induced the formation of focal adhesions (FA) with enhanced pulling forces at the cellular periphery preventing cellular spreading and adhesion. Proteomic and GO pathway analysis revealed that VSMC-derived sEVs display a cell adhesion signature and are specifically enriched with collagen VI on the sEV surface. In vitro assays identified collagen VI as playing a key role in cell adhesion and invasion directionality. Taken together, our data suggests that the accumulation of FN is a key early event in vessel repair acting to promote secretion of collagen VI enriched sEVs by VSMCs. These sEVs stimulate directional invasion, most likely by triggering peripheral focal adhesion formation and actomyosin contraction to exert sufficient traction force to enable VSMC movement within the complex vascular ECM network.

Item Type: Article
Date Type: Publication
Status: Published
Schools: Schools > Medicine
Publisher: eLife Sciences Publications
Date of First Compliant Deposit: 7 October 2025
Last Modified: 07 Oct 2025 09:45
URI: https://orca.cardiff.ac.uk/id/eprint/181512

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