Sortilin enhances fibrosis and calcification in aortic valve disease by inducing interstitial cell heterogeneity
European Heart Journal

Abstract
Calcific aortic valve disease (CAVD) is the most common valve disease, which consists of a chronic interplay of inflammation, fibrosis, and calcification. In this study, sortilin (SORT1) was identified as a novel key player in the pathophysiology of CAVD, and its role in the transformation of valvular interstitial cells (VICs) into pathological phenotypes is explored.
An aortic valve (AV) wire injury (AVWI) mouse model with sortilin deficiency was used to determine the effects of sortilin on AV stenosis, fibrosis, and calcification.
Sortilin promotes CAVD by mediating valvular fibrosis and calcification, and a newly identified phenotype (IMO-VIC). This is the first study to examine the role of sortilin in valvular calcification and it may render it a therapeutic target to inhibit IMO-VIC emergence by simultaneously reducing inflammation, fibrosis, and calcification, the three key pathological processes underlying CAVD.
Contributors

Farwah Iqbal
Author

Florian Schlotter
Author

Dakota Becker-Greene
Author

Adrien Lupieri
Author

Claudia Goettsch
Author

Joshua D Hutcheson
Author

Maximillian A Rogers
Author

Shinsuke Itoh
Author

Arda Halu
Author

Lang Ho Lee
Author

Mark C Blaser
Author

Andrew K Mlynarchik
Author

Sumihiko Hagita
Author

Shiori Kuraoka
Author

Hao Yu Chen
Author

James C Engert
Author

Livia S A Passos
Author

Prabhash K Jha
Author

Eric A Osborn
Author

Farouc A Jaffer
Author

Simon C Body
Author

Simon C Robson
Author

George Thanassoulis
Author

Masanori Aikawa
Author

Sasha A Singh
Author

Abhijeet R Sonawane
Author

Elena Aikawa
Author
