About this Research Topic
Cells that have resided in the cardiovascular system are exposed to continuous, highly dynamic mechanical forces in the temporal- and spatial-dependent manner. These mechanical forces include fluid shear stress produced by blood flow and acting on the cells in a tangential manner, circumferential stretch caused by the blood flow and pressure-induced deformation of organs, changes in stiffness/elasticity, geometry and topology of the extracellular matrix, and etc. Not only the changes in intracellular signaling, gene expression, DNA/RNA/protein modifications, and cell phenotype and functions in response to mechanical forces, but also the mechanical properties of cells change accordingly. The integration of multidisciplinary biotechnologies for the investigation of cardiovascular mechanobiology and elucidation of its underlying mechanisms and clinical perspectives can help to generate new approaches for therapeutic interventions against cardiovascular diseases.
The aim of this Research Topic is to gather a comprehensive list of articles related to “New insights into cardiovascular mechanobiology: molecular basis and clinical perspectives”. The collection will cover various aspects spanning from basic, translational and clinical research related to cardiovascular mechanobiology.
We welcome submission of Original Research articles, Reviews and Mini-reviews, including the following topics:
- Novel mechanotransduction mechanisms by which cells of cardiovascular system sense and convert environ-mental mechanical stimuli into biological signaling and newly developed therapeutic strategies for treating the dysregulated mechanosensing pathways.
- Development of in vitro and in vivo model systems designed to produce new understanding of cardiovascular mechanobiology.
- Advancement in molecular engineering, live cell imaging, and bio-nanotechnology to visualize and elucidate the molecular mechanisms by which cells of cardiovascular system perceive and respond to the mechanical microenvironmental cues.
- Quantitative characterization of the physical properties of cardiovascular system at the molecu-lar/cellular/tissue/organ levels and its implications in cardiovascular physiology and pathophysiology in health and disease.
- Roles of mechanical forces in the regulation of cardiovascular development and their underlying mechanisms.
- Mechanical regulation of cardiovascular tissue repair and regeneration and its clinical applications.
Keywords: mechanobiology, cell and molecular biology, bioengineering, cardiovascular health and disease, mechanotransduction
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.