Affiliation:
1. Department of Physiology, University of Arizona, and The Benjamin W. Zweifach Microcirculation Laboratories, Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Tucson, Arizona 85723
Abstract
The modulation of endothelial barrier function is thought to be a function of contractile tension mediated by the cell cytoskeleton, which consists of actomyosin stress fibers (SF) linked to focal adhesions (FA). We tested this hypothesis by dissociating SF/FA with Clostridium botulinum exoenzyme C3 transferase (C3), an inhibitor of the small GTP-binding protein RhoA. Bovine pulmonary artery endothelial cell (EC) monolayers given C3, C3 + thrombin, thrombin, or no treatment were examined using a size-selective permeability assay and quantitative digital imaging measurements of SF/FA. C3 treatment disassembled SF/FA, stimulated diffuse myosin II immunostaining, and reduced the phosphotyrosine (PY) content of paxillin and 130- to 140-kDa proteins that included p125FAK. C3-treated monolayers displayed a 60–85% decline in F-actin content and a 170–300% increase in EC surface area with enhanced endothelial barrier function. This activity correlated with reorganization of F-actin and PY protein(s) to β-catenin-containing cell-cell junctions. Because C3 prevented the thrombin-induced formation of myosin ribbons, SF/FA, and the increased PY content of proteins, these characteristics were Rho dependent. Our data show that C3 inhibition of Rho proteins leads to cAMP-like characteristics of reduced SF/FA and enhanced endothelial barrier function.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Cited by
109 articles.
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