Substrate stiffness modulates migration and local intercellular membrane motion in pulmonary endothelial cell monolayers

Author:

Paudel Sunita Subedi123ORCID,deWeever Althea13ORCID,Sayner Sarah13ORCID,Stevens Troy142ORCID,Tambe Dhananjay T.253ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physiology and Cell Biology, University of South Alabama, Mobile, Alabama

2. Department of Mechanical Aerospace and Biomedical Engineering, University of South Alabama, Mobile, Alabama

3. Center for Lung Biology, University of South Alabama, Mobile, Alabama

4. Department of Internal Medicine, University of South Alabama, Mobile, Alabama

5. Department of Pharmacology, University of South Alabama, Mobile, Alabama

Abstract

The pulmonary artery endothelium forms a semipermeable barrier that limits macromolecular flux through intercellular junctions. This barrier is maintained by an intrinsic forward protrusion of the interacting membranes between adjacent cells. However, the dynamic interactions of these membranes have been incompletely quantified. Here, we present a novel technique to quantify the motion of the peripheral membrane of the cells, called paracellular morphological fluctuations (PMFs), and to assess the impact of substrate stiffness on PMFs. Substrate stiffness impacted large-length scale morphological changes such as cell size and motion. Cell size was larger on stiffer substrates, whereas the speed of cell movement was decreased on hydrogels with stiffness either larger or smaller than 1.25 kPa, consistent with cells approaching a jammed state. Pulmonary artery endothelial cells moved fastest on 1.25 kPa hydrogel, a stiffness consistent with a healthy pulmonary artery. Unlike these large-length scale morphological changes, the baseline of PMFs was largely insensitive to the substrate stiffness on which the cells were cultured. Activation of store-operated calcium channels using thapsigargin treatment triggered a transient increase in PMFs beyond the control treatment. However, in hypocalcemic conditions, such an increase in PMFs was absent on 1.25 kPa hydrogel but was present on 30 kPa hydrogel—a stiffness consistent with that of a hypertensive pulmonary artery. These findings indicate that 1) PMFs occur in cultured endothelial cell clusters, irrespective of the substrate stiffness; 2) PMFs increase in response to calcium influx through store-operated calcium entry channels; and 3) stiffer substrate promotes PMFs through a mechanism that does not require calcium influx.

Funder

University of South Alabama

HHS | NIH | National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Cell Biology,Physiology

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