首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 250 毫秒
1.
We previously demonstrated that laminar shear stress enhances human coronary artery endothelial cell (HCAEC) wound closure via the mechanisms of cell spreading and migration. Because cell-cell junctional proteins such as vascular endothelial cell cadherin (VE-cadherin) are critical to cell-cell adhesion and motility, we tested the hypothesis that modulation of VE-cadherin expression under shear stress may be linked to this enhancement in wound closure. HCAEC monolayers were preconditioned to attain cellular alignment by shearing at 12 dynes/cm(2) for 18 hr in a parallel-plate flow chamber. Subsequently, they were divided into the following three groups: (i) control; (ii) treated with anti-cadherin-5 antibody; or (iii) treated with the calcium chelating agent EGTA. Next, the monolayers were wounded with a metal spatula and resheared at 20 dynes/cm(2) or left static. Time-lapse imaging was performed during the first 3 hr after imposition of these conditions. Immunocytochemistry or Western blot analyses for VE-cadherin expression were performed on all wounded monolayers. Deconvolution microscopy, three-dimensional cell-cell junctional reconstruction images, and histogram analyses of interendothelial junction signal intensities were performed on cells at the wound edge of a monolayer. Under shear, HCAEC demonstrated increased VE-cadherin immunofluorescence and protein expression despite an enhancement in wound closure compared with static conditions. In separate experiments, application with anti-cadherin-5 antibody or treatment with EGTA attenuated VE-cadherin expression and further enhanced wound closure compared with control shear and all static conditions. In addition, the pattern of VE-cadherin localization with these treatments became more intracellular and nuclear in appearance. These findings of changes in this junctional adhesion protein expression and localization may further our understanding of laminar shear stress-induced endothelial repair in the coronary circulation.  相似文献   

2.
We previously demonstrated that physiologic levels of shear stress enhance endothelial repair. Cell spreading and migration, but not proliferation, were the major mechanisms accounting for the increases in wound closure rate (Albuquerque et al., 2000, Am. J. Physiol. Heart Circ. Physiol. 279, H293-H302). However, the patterns and movements of beta-actin filaments responsible for cell motility and translocation in human coronary artery endothelial cells (HCAECs) have not been previously investigated under physiologic flow. HCAECs transfected with beta-actin-GFP were cultured on type I collagen-coated coverslips. Confluent cell monolayers were subjected to laminar shear stress of 12 dynes/cm(2) for 18 h in a parallel-plate flow chamber to attain cellular alignment and then wounded by scraping with a metal spatula and subsequently exposed to a laminar shear stress of 20 dynes/cm(2) (S-W-sH) or static (S-W-sT) conditions. Time-lapse imaging and deconvolution microscopy was performed during the first 3 h after imposition of S-W-sH or S-W-sT conditions. The spatial and temporal dynamics of beta-actin-GFP motility and translocation during wound closure in HCAEC monolayers were analyzed under both conditions. Compared with HCAEC under S-W-sT conditions, our data show that HCAEC under S-W-sH conditions demonstrated greater beta-actin-GFP motility, filament and clumping patterns, and filament arcs used during cellular attachment and detachment. These findings demonstrate intriguing patterns of beta-actin organization and movement during wound closure in HCAEC exposed to physiological flow.  相似文献   

3.
We previously demonstrated that physiologic levels of shear stress enhance endothelial repair. Cell spreading and migration, but not proliferation, were the major mechanisms accounting for the increases in wound closure rate (Albuquerque et al., 2000, Am. J. Physiol. Heart Circ. Physiol. 279, H293–H302). However, the patterns and movements of β-actin filaments responsible for cell motility and translocation in human coronary artery endothelial cells (HCAECs) have not been previously investigated under physiologic flow. HCAECs transfected with β-actin-GFP were cultured on type I collagen-coated coverslips. Confluent cell monolayers were subjected to laminar shear stress of 12 dynes/cm2 for 18 h in a parallel-plate flow chamber to attain cellular alignment and then wounded by scraping with a metal spatula and subsequently exposed to a laminar shear stress of 20 dynes/cm2 (S-W-sH) or static (S-W-sT) conditions. Time-lapse imaging and deconvolution microscopy was performed during the first 3 h after imposition of S-W-sH or S-W-sT conditions. The spatial and temporal dynamics of β-actin-GFP motility and translocation during wound closure in HCAEC monolayers were analyzed under both conditions. Compared with HCAEC under S-W-sT conditions, our data show that HCAEC under S-W-sH conditions demonstrated greater β-actin-GFP motility, filament and clumping patterns, and filament arcs used during cellular attachment and detachment. These findings demonstrate intriguing patterns of β-actin organization and movement during wound closure in HCAEC exposed to physiological flow.  相似文献   

4.
Repair of the endothelium occurs in the presence of continued blood flow, yet the mechanisms by which shear forces affect endothelial wound closure remain elusive. Therefore, we tested the hypothesis that shear stress enhances endothelial cell wound closure. Human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) or human coronary artery endothelial cells (HCAEC) were cultured on type I collagen-coated coverslips. Cell monolayers were sheared for 18 h in a parallel-plate flow chamber at 12 dyn/cm(2) to attain cellular alignment and then wounded by scraping with a metal spatula. Subsequently, the monolayers were exposed to a laminar shear stress of 3, 12, or 20 dyn/cm(2) under shear-wound-shear (S-W-sH) or shear-wound-static (S-W-sT) conditions for 6 h. Wound closure was measured as a percentage of original wound width. Cell area, centroid-to-centroid distance, and cell velocity were also measured. HUVEC wounds in the S-W-sH group exposed to 3, 12, or 20 dyn/cm(2) closed to 21, 39, or 50%, respectively, compared with only 59% in the S-W-sT cells. Similarly, HCAEC wounds closed to 29, 49, or 33% (S-W-sH) compared with 58% in the S-W-sT cells. Cell spreading and migration, but not proliferation, were the major mechanisms accounting for the increases in wound closure rate. These results suggest that physiological levels of shear stress enhance endothelial repair.  相似文献   

5.
Alphavbeta3-integrin antagonists reduced neointimal formation following vascular injury in eight different animal models. Because alpha-thrombin contributes to neointimal formation, we examined the hypothesis that alphavbeta3-integrins influence alpha-thrombin-induced signaling. Cultured rat aortic smooth muscle cells (RASMC) expressed alphavbeta3-integrins as demonstrated by immunofluorescence microscopy and fluorescence-activated cell sorting analysis. Proliferative responses to alpha-thrombin were partially inhibited by anti-beta3-integrin monoclonal antibody F11 and by cyclic RGD peptides. Immunofluorescence microscopy showed that alpha-thrombin stimulated a rapid increase in the formation of focal adhesions as identified by vinculin staining and that this effect was partially inhibited by alphavbeta3 antagonists. Beta3-integrin staining was diffuse in quiescent RASMC and did not concentrate at sites of focal adhesions following thrombin treatment. Alpha-thrombin elicited a time-dependent increase in activation of c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase-1 (JNK1) and in tyrosine phosphorylation of focal adhesion kinase (FAK). Alphavbeta3-integrin antagonists partially inhibited increases in JNK1 activity but had no effect on FAK phosphorylation. In SMC isolated from beta3-integrin-deficient mice, focal adhesion formation was impaired in response to thrombin but not sphingosine-1-phosphate, a potent activator of Rho. In summary, alphavbeta3-integrins play an important role in alpha-thrombin-induced proliferation and focal adhesion formation in RASMC.  相似文献   

6.
Sufficiently rapid healing of vascular endothelium following injury is essential for preventing further pathological complications. Recent work suggests that fluid dynamic shear stress regulates endothelial cell (EC) wound closure. Changes in membrane fluidity and activation of flow-sensitive ion channels are among the most rapid endothelial responses to flow and are thought to play an important role in EC responsiveness to shear stress. The goal of the present study was to probe the role of these responses in bovine aortic EC (BAEC) wound closure under shear stress. BAEC monolayers were mechanically wounded and subsequently subjected to either "high" (19 dyn/cm(2)) or "low" (3 dyn/cm(2)) levels of steady shear stress. Image analysis was used to quantify cell migration and spreading under both flow and static control conditions. Our results demonstrate that, under static conditions, BAECs along both wound edges migrate at similar velocities to cover the wounded area. Low shear stress leads to significantly lower BAEC migration velocities, whereas high shear stress results in cells along the upstream edge of the wound migrating significantly more rapidly than those downstream. The data also show that reducing BAEC membrane fluidity by enriching the cell membrane with exogenous cholesterol significantly slows down both cell spreading and migration under flow and hence retards wound closure. Blocking flow-sensitive K and Cl channels reduces cell spreading under flow but has no impact on cell migration. These findings provide evidence that membrane fluidity and flow-sensitive ion channels play distinct roles in regulating EC wound closure under flow.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Endothelial progenitor cells (EPC) enhance endothelial cell repair, improve endothelial dysfunction and are a predictor for cardiovascular mortality. High-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol levels inversely correlate with cardiovascular events and have vasculoprotective effects. Here we postulate that HDL influences EPC biology. HDL and EPC were isolated according to standard procedures. Differentiation of mononuclear cells into DiLDL/lectin positive cells was enhanced after HDL treatment compared to vehicle. HDL was able to inhibit apoptosis (TUNEL assay, annexin V staining) while proliferation (BrdU incorporation) of early outgrowth colonies after extended cell cultivation (14 days) was increased. Flow chamber experiments revealed an improved adhesion of HDL pre-incubated EPC on human coronary artery endothelial cells (HCAEC) compared to vehicle while HDL treatment of HCAEC prevented adhesion of inflammatory cells. Flow cytometry demonstrated an up-regulation of beta2- and alpha4-integrins on HDL pre-incubated EPC. Blocking experiments revealed a unique role of beta2-integrin in EPC adhesion. Treatment of wild-type mice with recombinant HDL after endothelial denudation resulted in enhanced re-endothelialization compared to vehicle. Finally, in patients with coronary artery disease a correlation between circulating EPC and HDL concentrations was demonstrated. We provide evidence that HDL mediates important vasculoprotective action via the improvement of function of circulating EPC.  相似文献   

9.
Initial adhesion of B16 melanoma variants to non-activated endothelial cells is mediated through specific interaction between GM3 (NeuAc alpha 2----3Gal beta 1----4Glc beta 1----Cer) expressed on melanoma cells and lactosylceramide (LacCer, Gal beta 1----4Glc beta 1----Cer) expressed on endothelial cells. This adhesion is predominant over integrin- or lectin-mediated adhesion in a dynamic flow experimental system employing a parallel plate laminar flow chamber (Lawrence, M. B., Smith, C. W., Eskin, S. G., and McIntire, L. V. (1990) Blood 75, 227-237). In this system, a tumor cell suspension flows over a glass plate coated with glycosphingolipid, lectin, or fibronectin, and adhesion is recorded on videotape. These conditions were designed to mimic the microvascular environment in which tumor metastatic deposition takes place. In contrast, lectin- and fibronectin-based mechanisms are predominant in previously used static adhesion systems. Under static conditions, the relative degree of adhesion of the four B16 variants to endothelial cells or to LacCer-coated plates was the same as their relative degree of GM3 expression (i.e. BL6 approximately F10 greater than F1 greater than WA4), and adhesion was inhibited in the presence of methyl-beta-lactoside, or liposomes containing LacCer or GM3. Adhesion was also inhibited by pretreatment of B16 cells with anti-GM3 antibody DH2 or sialidase and by pretreatment of endothelial cells with anti-LacCer antibody T5A7. Under dynamic flow conditions, WA4 cells did not adhere to mouse endothelial cells at high shear stress (greater than 2.5 dynes/cm2) but did adhere at lower shear stress. In contrast, BL6 and F10 cells adhered strongly at both low and high shear stress. BL6 cell adhesion to endothelial cells at both low and high shear stress was inhibited in the presence of antibody DH2, ethyl-beta-lactoside, or lactose, as well as by pretreatment of BL6 cells with sialidase. Thus, some clear differences, as well as similarities, in cell adhesion under static versus dynamic conditions are demonstrated. These findings suggest that melanoma cell adhesion to endothelial cells, based on GM3/LacCer interaction, initiates metastatic deposition, which may trigger a series of "cascade" reactions leading to activation of endothelial cells and expression of Ig family or selectin receptors, thereby promoting adhesion and migration of tumor cells.  相似文献   

10.
11.
12.
We investigated expression of the alpha(3)-integrin subunit by rat alveolar epithelial cells (AECs) grown in primary culture as well as the effects of monoclonal antibodies with blocking activity against the alpha(3)-integrin subunit on AEC monolayer formation. alpha(3)-Integrin subunit mRNA and protein were detectable in AECs on day 1 and increased with time in culture. alpha(3)- and beta(1)-integrin subunits coprecipitated in immunoprecipitation experiments with alpha(3)- and beta(1)-subunit-specific antibodies, consistent with their association as the alpha(3)beta(1)-integrin receptor at the cell membrane. Treatment with blocking anti-alpha(3) monoclonal antibody from day 0 delayed development of transepithelial resistance, reduced transepithelial resistance through day 5 compared with that in untreated AECs, and resulted in large subconfluent patches in monolayers viewed by scanning electron microscopy on day 3. These data indicate that alpha(3)- and beta(1)-integrin subunits are expressed in AEC monolayers where they form the heterodimeric alpha(3)beta(1)-integrin receptor at the cell membrane. Blockade of the alpha(3)-integrin subunit inhibits formation of confluent AEC monolayers. We conclude that the alpha(3)-integrin subunit modulates formation of AEC monolayers by virtue of the key role of the alpha(3)beta(1)-integrin receptor in AEC adhesion.  相似文献   

13.
Homotypic adhesion o2 neutrophils stimulated with chemoattractant is analogous to capture on vascular endothelium in that both processes depend on L-selectin and beta 2-integrin adhesion receptors. Under hydrodynamic shear, cell adhesion requires that receptors bind sufficient ligand over the duration of intercellular contact to withstand hydrodynamic stresses. Using cone-plate viscometry to apply a uniform linear shear field to suspensions of neutrophils, we conducted a detailed examination of the effect of shear rate and shear stress on the kinetics of cell aggregation. A collisional analysis based on Smoluchowski's flocculation theory was employed to fit the kinetics of aggregation with an adhesion efficiency. Adhesion efficiency increased with shear rate from approximately 20% at 100 s-1 to approximately 80% at 400 s-1. The increase in adhesion efficiency. Adhesion efficiency increased with shear rate from approximately 20% at 100 s-1 to approximately 80% at 400 s-1. The increase in adhesion efficiency with shear was dependent on L-selectin, and peak efficiency was maintained over a relatively narrow range of shear rates (400-800 s-1) and shear stresses (4-7 dyn/cm2). When L-selectin was blocked with antibody, beta 2-integrin (CD11a, b) supported adhesion at low shear rates (< 400 s-1). The binding kinetics of selectin and integrin appear to be optimized to function within discrete ranges of shear rate and stress, providing an intrinsic mechanism for the transition from neutrophil tethering to stable adhesion.  相似文献   

14.
Tyrosine phosphorylation of cytoskeletal proteins occurs during integrin-mediated cell adhesion to extracellular matrix proteins. We have investigated the role of tyrosine phosphorylation in the migration and initial spreading of human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC). Elevated phosphotyrosine concentrations were noted in the focal adhesions of HUVEC migrating into wounds. Anti-phosphotyrosine Western blots of extracts of wounded HUVEC monolayers demonstrated increased phosphorylation at 120-130 kDa when compared with extracts of intact monolayers. The pp125FAK immunoprecipitated from wounded monolayers exhibited increased kinase activity as compared to pp125FAK from intact monolayers. The time to wound closure in HUVEC monolayers was doubled by tyrphostin AG 213 treatment. The same concentration of AG 213 interfered with HUVEC focal adhesion and stress fiber formation. AG 213 inhibited adhesion-associated tyrosine phosphorylation of pp125FAK in HUVEC. Tyrphostins AG 213 and AG 808 inhibited pp125FAK activity in in vitro kinase assays. pp125FAK immunoprecipitates from HUVEC treated with both of these inhibitors also had kinase activity in vitro that was below levels seen in untreated HUVEC. These findings suggest that tyrosine phosphorylation of cytoskeletal proteins may be important in HUVEC spreading and migration and that pp125FAK may mediate phosphotyrosine formation during these processes.  相似文献   

15.
Del1 is a matrix protein transiently expressed by embryonic endothelial cells. It was recently demonstrated that vascular endothelial cells adhere and interact with Del1 through alpha(v)beta(3)- integrins, providing an autocrine angiogenic signaling pathway in this cell type. To determine whether Del1 might signal to other cell types in the vessel wall in a paracrine fashion, studies were conducted with vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMC). Del1 promoted adhesion and migration of VSMC in a dose-dependent fashion. These functions were mediated through alpha(v)beta(3)-integrins, as the vitronectin receptor inhibitory peptide containing penacillamine (PCN) arginine-glycine-aspartic acid (PCN-RGD) and an antibody specific for the alpha(v)beta(3)-integrin specifically blocked both adhesion and migration. Adhesion of VSMC to Del1 was associated with organization of actin filaments and formation of focal contacts enriched in vinculin and alpha(v)beta(3). Furthermore, Del1 supported VSMC proliferation at least in part by inhibiting these cells from undergoing apoptosis. These data, in conjunction with evidence that Del1 expression is reactivated in vascular injury, suggest that Del1 may have a paracrine role in vessel wall development and remodeling.  相似文献   

16.
The alpha4 laminin subunit is a component of endothelial cell basement membranes. An antibody (2A3) against the alpha4 laminin G domain stains focal contact-like structures in transformed and primary microvascular endothelial cells (TrHBMECs and HMVECs, respectively), provided the latter cells are activated with growth factors. The 2A3 antibody staining colocalizes with that generated by alphav and beta3 integrin antibodies and, consistent with this localization, TrHBMECs and HMVECs adhere to the alpha4 laminin subunit G domain in an alphavbeta3-integrin-dependent manner. The alphavbeta3 integrin/2A3 antibody positively stained focal contacts are recognized by vinculin antibodies as well as by antibodies against plectin. Unusually, vimentin intermediate filaments, in addition to microfilament bundles, interact with many of the alphavbeta3 integrin-positive focal contacts. We have investigated the function of alpha4-laminin and alphavbeta3-integrin, which are at the core of these focal contacts, in cultured endothelial cells. Antibodies against these proteins inhibit branching morphogenesis of TrHBMECs and HMVECs in vitro, as well as their ability to repopulate in vitro wounds. Thus, we have characterized an endothelial cell matrix adhesion, which shows complex cytoskeletal interactions and whose assembly is regulated by growth factors. Our data indicate that this adhesion structure may play a role in angiogenesis.  相似文献   

17.
To identify the role of caveolin-1 in integrin mechanotransduction, we exposed bovine aortic endothelial cells to 10 dyn/cm2 of laminar shear stress. Caveolin-1 was acutely and transiently phosphorylated with shear, occurring downstream of beta1-integrin activation as the beta1-integrin blocking antibody JB1A was inhibitory. In manipulating Src family kinase (SFK) activity with knockdown of Csk or type 1 protein phosphatase (PP1) treatment, we observed coordinate increase and decrease in shear-induced caveolin-1 phosphorylation, respectively. Hence, shear-stimulated caveolin-1 phosphorylation is regulated by SFKs. Shear-induced recruitment and phosphorylation of caveolin-1 occurred at beta1-integrin sites in a beta1-integrin- and SFK-dependent manner. Csk, described to interact with pY14-caveolin-1 and integrins, bound to an increased pool of phosphorylated caveolin-1 after shear corresponding with elevated Csk at beta1-integrin sites. Like caveolin-1, treatment with JB1A and PP1 attenuated shear-induced Csk association with beta1-integrins. Csk function was assayed with transfection of a caveolin-1 phosphorylation domain peptide. The peptide attenuated shear-induced association of Csk at beta1-integrin sites, as well as colocalization of Csk with paxillin and phosphorylated caveolin-1. Because integrin and Csk activity regulate cytoskeletal reorganization, we evaluated the role of this mechanism in shear-induced myosin light chain (MLC) phosphorylation. Knockdown of Csk expression was sufficient to reduce MLC diphosphorylation due to shear. Disruption of Csk-integrin association by peptide treatment was also inhibitory of the MLC diphosphorylation response. Together these data indicate that integrin activation with shear stress results in SFK-regulated caveolin-1 phosphorylation that, in turn, mediates Csk association at integrin sites, where it plays a role in downstream, shear-stimulated MLC diphosphorylation.  相似文献   

18.
We have examined functions of the cytoplasmic domain of E-selectin, an inducible endothelial transmembrane protein, especially its ability to associate with the cytoskeleton during leukocyte adhesion. Confocal microscopy of interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta)-activated human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) visualized clustering of E-selectin molecules in the vicinity of leukocyte-endothelial cell attachment sites. A detergent based extraction and Western blotting procedure demonstrated an association of E-selectin with the insoluble (cytoskeletal) fraction of endothelial monolayers that correlated with adhesion of leukocytes via an E-selectin-dependent mechanism. A mutant form of E-selectin lacking the cytoplasmic domain (tailless E-selectin) was expressed in COS-7 cell and supported leukocyte attachment (in a nonstatic adhesion assay) in a fashion similar to the native E-selectin molecule, but failed to become associated with the cytoskeletal fraction. To identify the cytoskeletal components that associate with the cytoplasmic domain of E-selectin, paramagnetic beads coated with the adhesion-blocking anti-E-selectin monoclonal antibody H18/7 were incubated with IL-1 beta-activated HUVEC, and then subjected to detergent extraction and magnetic separation. Certain actin-associated proteins, including alpha-actinin, vinculin, filamin, paxillin, as well as focal adhesion kinase (FAK), were copurified by this procedure, however talin was not. When a mechanical stress was applied to H18/7- coated ferromagnetic beads bound to the surface of IL-1 beta-activated HUVEC, using a magnetical twisting cytometer, the observed resistance to the applied stress was inhibited by cytochalasin D, thus demonstrating transmembrane cytoskeletal mechanical linkage. COS-7 cells transfected with the tailless E-selectin failed to show resistance to the twisting stress. Taken together, these data indicate that leukocyte adhesion to cytokine-activated HUVEC induces transmembrane cytoskeletal linkage of E-selectin through its cytoplasmic domain, a process which may have important implications for cell-cell signaling as well as mechanical anchoring during leukocyte- endothelial adhesive interactions.  相似文献   

19.
In this study, we examined the effects of shark cartilage extract on the attachment and spreading properties and the focal adhesion structure of cultured bovine pulmonary artery endothelial cells. Treatment with cartilage extract resulted in cell detachment from the substratum. Immunofluorescence staining of those treated cells that remained attached showed that, instead of being present in both central and peripheral focal adhesions as in control cells, both integrin alpha(v)beta(3) and vinculin were found only in peripheral focal adhesion and thinner actin filament bundles were seen. In addition to causing cell detachment, cartilage extract partially inhibited the initial adherence of the cells to the substratum in a dose-dependent manner. Integrin alpha(v)beta(3) and vinculin staining of these cells also showed a peripheral focal adhesion distribution pattern. Vitronectin induced cell spreading in the absence of serum, but was blocked by simultaneous incubation with cartilage extract, which was shown to inhibit both integrin alpha(v)beta(3) and vinculin recruitment to focal adhesion and the formation of stress fibers. Dot binding assays showed that these inhibitory effects on cell attachment and spreading were not due to direct binding of cartilage extract components to integrin alpha(v)beta(3) or vitronectin. Shark cartilage chondroitin sulfate had no inhibitory effect on either cell attachment or spreading of endothelial cells. These results show that the inhibitory effects of cartilage extract on cell attachment and spreading are mediated by modification of the organization of focal adhesion proteins.  相似文献   

20.
In isolated resistance arterioles with spontaneous tone, ligation of alpha4beta1- and alpha5beta1-integrins induces vasoconstriction whereas ligation of alphavbeta3-integrin induces vasodilation. However, whether integrins directly participate in myogenic constriction to pressure elevation is not known. To answer this question, isolated rat skeletal muscle arterioles were exposed to step increments in pressure in the absence or presence of peptides and function-blocking antibodies known to bind alpha4beta1-, alpha5beta1-, or alphavbeta3-integrins while vessel diameter was continually monitored. Myogenic constriction, as assessed by the ability of isolated arterioles to reduce their diameter in response to two consecutive increments in intraluminal pressure (90-110 and 110-130 cmH2O), was not affected by treatment with any of the control peptides (RAD, LEV), a control antibody (anti-rat major histocompatibility complex), an alpha4beta1-integrin-binding peptide (LDV), or an anti-alpha4-integrin antibody. In contrast, alpha5beta1-integrin blockade with either anti-alpha5- or anti-beta1-integrin antibody caused a significant inhibition of myogenic constriction. Also, both RGD peptide and anti-beta3-integrin antibody inhibited myogenic constriction. These results indicate that alpha5beta1- and alphavbeta3-integrins are necessary for myogenic constriction and further suggest that integrins are part of the mechanosensory apparatus responsible for the ability of vascular smooth muscle cells to detect and/or respond to changes in intraluminal pressure.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号