Substrate stiffening promotes endothelial monolayer disruption through enhanced physical forces

Author:

Krishnan Ramaswamy1,Klumpers Darinka D.1,Park Chan Y.1,Rajendran Kavitha1,Trepat Xavier2,van Bezu Jan3,van Hinsbergh Victor W. M.3,Carman Christopher V.4,Brain Joseph D.1,Fredberg Jeffrey J.1,Butler James P.5,van Nieuw Amerongen Geerten P.3

Affiliation:

1. Molecular and Integrative Physiological Sciences, Department of Environmental Health, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts;

2. Universitat de Barcelona, Institute for Bioengineering of Catalonia, and Ciber Enfermedades Respiratorias, Barcelona, Spain;

3. VU University Medical Center, Institute for Cardiovascular Research, Department of Physiology, Amsterdam, The Netherlands;

4. Center for Vascular Biology Research, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston; and

5. Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts

Abstract

A hallmark of many, sometimes life-threatening, inflammatory diseases and disorders is vascular leakage. The extent and severity of vascular leakage is broadly mediated by the integrity of the endothelial cell (EC) monolayer, which is in turn governed by three major interactions: cell-cell and cell-substrate contacts, soluble mediators, and biomechanical forces. A potentially critical but essentially uninvestigated component mediating these interactions is the stiffness of the substrate to which the endothelial monolayer is adherent. Accordingly, we investigated the extent to which substrate stiffening influences endothelial monolayer disruption and the role of cell-cell and cell-substrate contacts, soluble mediators, and physical forces in that process. Traction force microscopy showed that forces between cell and cell and between cell and substrate were greater on stiffer substrates. On stiffer substrates, these forces were substantially enhanced by a hyperpermeability stimulus (thrombin, 1 U/ml), and gaps formed between cells. On softer substrates, by contrast, these forces were increased far less by thrombin, and gaps did not form between cells. This stiffness-dependent force enhancement was associated with increased Rho kinase activity, whereas inhibition of Rho kinase attenuated baseline forces and lessened thrombin-induced inter-EC gap formation. Our findings demonstrate a central role of physical forces in EC gap formation and highlight a novel physiological mechanism. Integrity of the endothelial monolayer is governed by its physical microenvironment, which in normal circumstances is compliant but during pathology becomes stiffer.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Cell Biology,Physiology

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