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 15 毫秒
1.
Endothelial cells from human umbilical vein perfused at 0.5 ml/min released vasopressin, endothelin, and substance P. Upon perfusion of the cells at 3.0 ml/min, the release of endothelia and vasopressin was significantly increased whereas the release of substance P was significantly decreased. Endothelial cells precultured for 24 h with interleukin-I (IL-1) and interferon-γ (IFN-γ) released more endothelin and less substance P at low flow and there was no further increase in release at high flow rate. These results suggest that cytokines suppress the normal responses of endothelial cells to increased fluid shear stress.  相似文献   

2.
Cultured bovine endothelial cells were seeded onto the intimal surface of endothelium-denuded rings of canine coronary artery. These rings did not previously relax to acetylcholine, substance P, bradykinin, and A23187. After seeding, the same rings relaxed to bradykinin and A23187, but not to acetycholine or substance P. Indomethacin pretreatment did not affect these responses. Cells from the same source were then grown to confluence on microcarrier beads, poured into small columns, and perfused with Krebs' solution. The perfusate from the columns was bioassayed on endothelium-denuded rings of coronary artery from either the dog or pig. Challenge of the column in the presence of indomethacin with either bradykinin or A23187 as well as acetylcholine or substance P caused release of a substance that relaxed both types of artery. Its activity half-life was 6.4 +/- 0.4 sec at 37 degrees C and it was hydrophilic and negatively charged. Prostacyclin (PGI2) as a candidate for EDRF was ruled out because 1) indomethacin failed to block its release and 2) the pig coronary artery, although insensitive to PGI2, relaxed to the endothelium-derived substance. These results show that, in response to a number of dilator drugs, cultured endothelial cells release a vascular relaxing substance (EDRF) that has characteristics similar to the EDRF of normal endothelium. The chemical nature of EDRF awaits clarification.  相似文献   

3.
Vascular endothelial cells that are in direct contact with blood flow are exposed to fluid shear stress and regulate vascular homeostasis. Studies report endothelial cells to release ATP in response to shear stress that in turn modulates cellular functions via P2 receptors with P2X4 mediating shear stress-induced calcium signaling and vasodilation. A recent study shows that a loss-of-function polymorphism in the human P2X4 resulting in a Tyr315>Cys variant is associated with increased pulse pressure and impaired endothelial vasodilation. Although the importance of shear stress-induced Krüppel-like factor 2 (KLF2) expression in atheroprotection is well studied, whether ATP regulates KLF2 remains unanswered and is the objective of this study. Using an in vitro model, we show that in human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs), apyrase decreased shear stress-induced KLF2, KLF4, and NOS3 expression but not that of NFE2L2. Exposure of HUVECs either to shear stress or ATPγS under static conditions increased KLF2 in a P2X4-dependent manner as was evident with both the receptor antagonist and siRNA knockdown. Furthermore, transient transfection of static cultures of human endothelial cells with the Tyr315>Cys mutant P2X4 construct blocked ATP-induced KLF2 expression. Also, P2X4 mediated the shear stress-induced phosphorylation of extracellular regulated kinase-5, a known regulator of KLF2. This study demonstrates a major physiological finding that the shear-induced effects on endothelial KLF2 axis are in part dependent on ATP release and P2X4, a previously unidentified mechanism.

Electronic supplementary material

The online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s11302-014-9442-3) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.  相似文献   

4.
The mechanisms by which flow-imposed shear stress elevates intracellular Ca2+ in cultured endothelial cells (ECs) are not fully understood. Here we report finding that endogenously released ATP contributes to shear stress-induced Ca2+ responses. Application of flow of Hanks' balanced solution to human pulmonary artery ECs (HPAECs) elicited shear stress-dependent increases in Ca2+ concentrations. Chelation of extracellular Ca2+ with EGTA completely abolished the Ca2+ responses, whereas the phospholipase C inhibitor U-73122 or the Ca2+-ATPase inhibitor thapsigargin had no effect, which thereby indicates that the response was due to the influx of extracellular Ca2+. The Ca2+ influx was significantly suppressed by apyrase, which degrades ATP, or antisense oligonucleotide targeted to P2X4 purinoceptors. A luciferase luminometric assay showed that shear stress induced dose-dependent release of ATP. When the ATP release was inhibited by the ATP synthase inhibitors angiostatin or oligomycin, the Ca2+ influx was markedly suppressed but was restored by removal of these inhibitors or addition of extracellular ATP. These results suggest that shear stress stimulates HPAECs to release ATP, which activates Ca2+ influx via P2X4 receptors.  相似文献   

5.
Fluid shear stress modulates the functional responses of platelets and vascular cells, and plays an important role in the pathogenesis of vascular disorders, including atherosclerosis and restenosis. Since shear stress induces activation of platelets, which abundantly store sphingosine 1-phosphate (Sph-1-P), and upregulates the mRNA expression of S1P(1), the most important Sph-1-P receptor expressed on the endothelial cells, we examined the effects of shear stress on the Sph-1-P-related responses involving these cells. Shear stress was found to induce Sph-1-P release from the platelets in a shear intensity- and time-dependent manner. Inhibitors of protein kinase C suppressed this mechanical force-induced Sph-1-P release, suggesting involvement of this kinase. On the other hand, in vascular endothelial cells, shear stress increased S1P(1) protein expression, as revealed by flow-cytometric analysis, and the responsiveness to Sph-1-P, which was assessed by monitoring the intracellular Ca(2+) concentration. These results indicate that shear stress enhances the Sph-1-P responses in cell-cell interactions between platelets and endothelial cells.  相似文献   

6.
We have examined the effect of shear stress on the production of endothelin by cultured porcine endothelial cells. Low shear stress stimulated the expression of endothelin mRNA in polygonal endothelial cells with a peak time of 2 to 4 hours and also increased the release of immunoreactive endothelin into the culture medium. The expression of endothelin mRNA in the ellipsoidal endothelial cells under higher shear stress was not different from that of the control level. Our results suggest a possible role for hemodynamic shear stress in the regulation of endothelin production in vascular endothelial cells.  相似文献   

7.
Uncontrolled blood glucose in people with diabetes correlates with endothelial cell dysfunction, which contributes to accelerated atherosclerosis and subsequent myocardial infarction, stroke, and peripheral vascular disease. In vitro, both low and high glucose induce endothelial cell dysfunction; however the effect of altered glucose on endothelial cell fluid flow response has not been studied. This is critical to understanding diabetic cardiovascular disease, since endothelial cell cytoskeletal alignment and nitric oxide release in response to shear stress from flowing blood are atheroprotective. In this study, porcine aortic endothelial cells were cultured in 1, 5.55, and 33 mM D-glucose medium (low, normal, and high glucose) and exposed to 20 dynes/cm2 shear stress for up to 24 hours in a parallel plate flow chamber. Actin alignment and endothelial nitric oxide synthase phosphorylation increased with shear stress for cells in normal glucose, but not cells in low and high glucose. Both low and high glucose elevated protein kinase C (PKC) levels; however PKC blockade only restored actin alignment in high glucose cells. Cells in low glucose instead released vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), which translocated β-catenin away from the cell membrane and disabled the mechanosensory complex. Blocking VEGF in low glucose restored cell actin alignment in response to shear stress. These data suggest that low and high glucose alter endothelial cell alignment and nitric oxide production in response to shear stress through different mechanisms.  相似文献   

8.
Endothelial cells in culture produce a vasoconstrictor substance   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
We report that cultured vascular endothelial cells release into the culture medium a vasoconstrictor peptide, a substance we call an endothelium-derived constricting factor (EDCF). Conditioned medium from cultured bovine aortic and pulmonary artery endothelial cells caused sustained, dose-dependent isometric constriction of vascular rings isolated from bovine coronary and pulmonary arteries and rat and guinea pig pulmonary arteries and aortas. The medium also caused vasoconstriction when infused into isolated, perfused rabbit hearts and rat kidneys. Conditioned medium from bovine aortic intimal explants also contained constrictor activity, whereas medium from denuded intimal explants, cultured microvascular endothelial cells, vascular smooth muscle cells, or lung fibroblasts did not. Constrictor activity increased progressively in the culture medium over 2-12 h of incubation. Thrombin stimulated the release of constrictor activity; hypoxia, anoxia and meclofenamate had no effect and the calcium ionophore A23187 inhibited EDCF release. The EDCF caused a characteristic slow-onset and sustained constriction of the vascular rings that relaxed slowly over 60-90 min following removal. The constriction was not affected by inhibitors of arachidonic acid metabolism or by antagonists of serotonergic, histaminergic, alpha-adrenergic, opioid, leukotriene, angiotensin II, or substance P receptors; constriction was reversed partly by verapamil and acetylcholine and completely by nitroprusside and isoproterenol. EDCF was heat stable, not extractable into organic solvents, and completely destroyed by trypsin and neutral protease. Cycloheximide blocked the production of EDCF. These properties and the results of polyacrylamide gel filtration experiments suggested that EDCF was a peptide with a molecular weight of 3,000 daltons. These findings show that endothelial cells in culture produce a vasoconstrictor substance and support the idea that endothelial cell products play a role in mediating vascular tone.  相似文献   

9.
Endothelial cells isolated from the thoracic aorta of normoxic and chronically hypoxic rats were perfused (0.5 ml min-1) and stimulated by increased flow rate (3.0 ml min-1). The release of ATP, endothelin and vasopressin was investigated. During periods of high flow rate, endothelial cells isolated from normoxic rats increased their release of ATP and endothelin. In comparison, in hypoxic rats, ATP release during the period of high flow rate was less, whereas endothelin release was greater. Vasopressin release was not increased during periods of stimulation in either group of animals. These results suggest that, under conditions of reduced arterial oxygen tension, a dynamic balance between ATP and endothelin release could regulate the response of vessels to shear stress.  相似文献   

10.
The secretion of angiogenic factors by vascular endothelial cells is one of the key mechanisms of angiogenesis. Here we report on the isolation of a new potent angiogenic factor, diuridine tetraphosphate (Up4U) from the secretome of human endothelial cells. The angiogenic effect of the endothelial secretome was partially reduced after incubation with alkaline phosphatase and abolished in the presence of suramin. In one fraction, purified to homogeneity by reversed phase and affinity chromatography, Up4U was identified by MALDI-LIFT-fragment-mass-spectrometry, enzymatic cleavage analysis and retention-time comparison. Beside a strong angiogenic effect on the yolk sac membrane and the developing rat embryo itself, Up4U increased the proliferation rate of endothelial cells and, in the presence of PDGF, of vascular smooth muscle cells. Up4U stimulated the migration rate of endothelial cells via P2Y2-receptors, increased the ability of endothelial cells to form capillary-like tubes and acts as a potent inducer of sprouting angiogenesis originating from gel-embedded EC spheroids. Endothelial cells released Up4U after stimulation with shear stress. Mean total plasma Up4U concentrations of healthy subjects (N = 6) were sufficient to induce angiogenic and proliferative effects (1.34±0.26 nmol L-1). In conclusion, Up4U is a novel strong human endothelium-derived angiogenic factor.  相似文献   

11.
Studies were carried out to determine the effects of IL-1beta on newborn intestinal hemodynamics. IL-1beta increased the release of ET-1 by primary endothelial cells in a dose-dependent manner; as well, it reduced expression of the endothelin (ET) type B (ET(B)) receptor on endothelial cells and increased expression of the ET type A (ET(A)) receptor on vascular smooth muscle cells. IL-1beta increased endothelial cell endothelial nitric oxide (NO) synthase (eNOS) expression but did not enhance eNOS activity as evidenced by release of NO(x) into conditioned medium in response to acetylcholine or shear stress. The effects of IL-1beta on flow-induced dilation were evaluated in terminal mesenteric arteries in vitro. Pretreatment with IL-1beta (1 ng; 4 h) significantly attenuated vasodilation in response to flow rates of 100 and 200 microl/min. This effect was mediated, in part, by the endothelin ET(A) receptor; thus selective blockade of ET(A) receptors with BQ610 nearly restored flow-induced dilation. In contrast, exogenous ET-1 only shifted the diameter-flow curve downward without altering the percent vasodilation in response to flow. The effects of IL-1beta on ileal oxygenation were then studied using in vivo gut loops. Intramesenteric artery infusion of IL-1beta upstream of the gut loop caused ileal vasoconstriction and reduced the arterial-venous O(2) difference across the gut loop; consequently, it reduced ileal oxygenation by 60%. This effect was significantly attenuated by pretreatment with BQ610. These data support a linkage between the proinflammatory cytokine IL-1beta and vascular dysfunction within the intestinal circulation, mediated, at least in part, by the ET system.  相似文献   

12.
ATP and its degradation products play an important role as signaling molecules in the vascular system, and endothelial cells are considered to be an important source of nucleotide release. To investigate the mechanism and physiological significance of endothelial ATP release, we compared different pharmacological stimuli for their ability to evoke ATP release from first passage cultivated human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs). Agonists known to increase intracellular Ca(2+) levels (A23187, histamine, thrombin) induced a stable, non-lytic ATP release. Since thrombin proved to be the most robust and reproducible stimulus, the molecular mechanism of thrombin-mediated ATP release from HUVECs was further investigated. ATP rapidly increased with thrombin (1 U/ml) and reached a steady-state level after 4 min. Loading the cells with BAPTA-AM to capture intracellular calcium suppressed ATP release. The thrombin-specific, protease-activated receptor 1 (PAR-1)-specific agonist peptide TFLLRN (10 μM) fully mimicked thrombin action on ATP release. To identify the nature of the ATP-permeable pathway, we tested various inhibitors of potential ATP channels for their ability to inhibit the thrombin response. Carbenoxolone, an inhibitor of connexin hemichannels and pannexin channels, as well as Gd(3+) were highly effective in blocking the thrombin-mediated ATP release. Specifically targeting connexin43 (Cx43) and pannexin1 (Panx1) revealed that reducing Panx1 expression significantly reduced ATP release, while downregulating Cx43 was ineffective. Our study demonstrates that thrombin at physiological concentrations is a potent stimulus of endothelial ATP release involving PAR-1 receptor activation and intracellular calcium mobilization. ATP is released by a carbenoxolone- and Gd(3+)- sensitive pathway, most likely involving Panx1 channels.  相似文献   

13.
A dynamic model is proposed for shear stress induced adenosine triphosphate (ATP) release from endothelial cells (ECs). The dynamic behavior of the ATP/ADP concentration at the endothelial surface by viscous shear flow is investigated through simulation studies based on the dynamic ATP release model. The numerical results demonstrate that the ATP/ADP concentration against time at endothelium-fluid interface predicted by the dynamic ATP release model is more consistent with the experimental observations than that predicted by previous static ATP release model.  相似文献   

14.
Pak KJ  Geary GG  Duckles SP  Krause DN 《Life sciences》2002,71(14):1633-1642
Several different vasodilator substances can be released by vascular endothelium in response to mechanical stimuli and vasoactive agents. The purpose of this study was to determine whether there is a male-female difference in the relative contributions of nitric oxide (NO) and endothelium-derived hyperpolarizing factor (EDHF) to endothelium-dependent vasodilation. Perfusion pressure was measured in isolated tail arteries from male and female rats. Vasodilators released by mechanical shear stress were assessed by constricting the artery with methoxamine; acetylcholine was applied to induce receptor-mediated vasodilation. We used an inhibitor of NO synthase, N(G)-monomethyl-L-arginine acetate (L-NMMA), and elevated levels of K(+) (27 mM) to reveal the relative contributions of NO and EDHF, respectively. Indomethacin was present in all experiments to block prostanoid production. The results indicate that NO was the primary vasodilator released by male tail arteries in response to both mechanical stress and acetylcholine (the L-NMMA-sensitive component of the combined L-NMMA/K(+) effect was 83 +/- 8% and 101 +/- 4%, respectively). However female tail arteries appeared to utilize both NO and EDHF for vascular relaxation (e.g., L-NMMA sensitivity: 58 +/- 9%; K+-sensitivity: 42 +/- 9% in mechanical stress experiments). These findings suggest endothelial regulation differs between males and females.  相似文献   

15.
We investigated changes in calcium concentration in cultured bovine aortic endothelial cells (BAECs) and rat adrenomedulary endothelial cells (RAMECs, microvascular) in response to different levels of shear stress. In BAECs, the onset of shear stress elicited a transient increase in intracellular calcium concentration that was spatially uniform, synchronous, and dose dependent. In contrast, the response of RAMECs was heterogeneous in time and space. Shear stress induced calcium waves that originated from one or several cells and propagated to neighboring cells. The number and size of the responding groups of cells did not depend on the magnitude of shear stress or the magnitude of the calcium change in the responding cells. The initiation and the propagation of calcium waves in RAMECs were significantly suppressed under conditions in which either purinergic receptors were blocked by suramin or extracellular ATP was degraded by apyrase. Exogenously applied ATP produced similarly heterogeneous responses. The number of responding cells was dependent on ATP concentration, but the magnitude of the calcium change was not. Our data suggest that shear stress stimulates RAMECs to release ATP, causing the increase in intracellular calcium concentration via purinergic receptors in cells that are heterogeneously sensitive to ATP. The propagation of the calcium signal is also mediated by ATP, and the spatial pattern suggests a locally elevated ATP concentration in the vicinity of the initially responding cells.  相似文献   

16.
Endothelium-derived relaxing and contracting factors   总被引:68,自引:0,他引:68  
Endothelium-dependent relaxation of blood vessels is produced by a large number of agents (e.g., acetylcholine, ATP and ADP, substance P, bradykinin, histamine, thrombin, serotonin). With some agents, relaxation may be limited to certain species and/or blood vessels. Relaxation results from release of a very labile non-prostanoid endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF) or factors. EDRF stimulates guanylate cyclase of the vascular smooth muscle, with the resulting increase in cyclic GMP activating relaxation. EDRF is rapidly inactivated by hemoglobin and superoxide. There is strong evidence that EDRF from many blood vessels and from cultured endothelial cells is nitric oxide (NO) and that its precursor is L-arginine. There is evidence for other relaxing factors, including an endothelium-derived hyperpolarizing factor in some vessels. Flow-induced shear stress also stimulates EDRF release. Endothelium-dependent relaxation occurs in resistance vessels as well as in larger arteries, and is generally more pronounced in arteries than veins. EDRF also inhibits platelet aggregation and adhesion to the blood vessel wall. Endothelium-derived contracting factors appear to be responsible for endothelium-dependent contractions produced by arachidonic acid and hypoxia in isolated systemic vessels and by certain agents and by rapid stretch in isolated cerebral vessels. In all such experiments, the endothelium-derived contracting factor appears to be some product or by-product of cyclooxygenase activity. Recently, endothelial cells in culture have been found to synthesize a peptide, endothelin, which is an extremely potent vasoconstrictor. The possible physiological roles and pathophysiological significance of endothelium-derived relaxing and contracting factors are briefly discussed.  相似文献   

17.
Endothelial cells (ECs) release ATP in response to shear stress, a mechanical force generated by blood flow, and the ATP released modulates EC functions through activation of purinoceptors. The molecular mechanism of the shear stress-induced ATP release, however, has not been fully elucidated. In this study, we have demonstrated that cell surface ATP synthase is involved in shear stress-induced ATP release. Immunofluorescence staining of human pulmonary arterial ECs (HPAECs) showed that cell surface ATP synthase is distributed in lipid rafts and co-localized with caveolin-1, a marker protein of caveolae. Immunoprecipitation indicated that cell surface ATP synthase and caveolin-1 are physically associated. Measurement of the extracellular metabolism of [(3)H]ADP confirmed that cell surface ATP synthase is active in ATP generation. When exposed to shear stress, HPAECs released ATP in a dose-dependent manner, and the ATP release was markedly suppressed by the membrane-impermeable ATP synthase inhibitors angiostatin and piceatannol and by an anti-ATP synthase antibody. Depletion of plasma membrane cholesterol with methyl-beta-cyclodextrin (MbetaCD) disrupted lipid rafts and abolished co-localization of ATP synthase with caveolin-1, which resulted in a marked reduction in shear stress-induced ATP release. Pretreatment of the cells with cholesterol prevented these effects of MbetaCD. Downregulation of caveolin-1 expression by transfection of caveolin-1 siRNA also markedly suppressed ATP-releasing responses to shear stress. Neither MbetaCD, MbetaCD plus cholesterol, nor caveolin-1 siRNA had any effect on the amount of cell surface ATP synthase. These results suggest that the localization and targeting of ATP synthase to caveolae/lipid rafts is critical for shear stress-induced ATP release by HPAECs.  相似文献   

18.
Previous studies suggested indirectly that vascular endothelial cells (VECs) might be able to release intracellularly-formed adenosine. We isolated VECs from the rat soleus muscle using collagenase digestion and magnetic-activated cell sorting (MACS). The VEC preparation had >90% purity based on cell morphology, fluorescence immunostaining, and RT-PCR of endothelial markers. The kinetic properties of endothelial cytosolic 5′-nucleotidase suggested it was the AMP-preferring N-I isoform: its catalytic activity was 4 times higher than ecto-5′nucleotidase. Adenosine kinase had 50 times greater catalytic activity than adenosine deaminase, suggesting that adenosine removal in VECs is mainly through incorporation into adenine nucleotides. The maximal activities of cytosolic 5′-nucleotidase and adenosine kinase were similar. Adenosine and ATP accumulated in the medium surrounding VECs in primary culture. Hypoxia doubled the adenosine, but ATP was unchanged; AOPCP did not alter medium adenosine, suggesting that hypoxic VECs had released intracellularly-formed adenosine. Acidosis increased medium ATP, but extracellular conversion of ATP to AMP was inhibited, and adenosine remained unchanged. Acidosis in the buffer-perfused rat gracilis muscle elevated AMP and adenosine in the venous effluent, but AOPCP abolished the increase in adenosine, suggesting that adenosine is formed extracellularly by non-endothelial tissues during acidosis in vivo. Hypoxia plus acidosis increased medium ATP by a similar amount to acidosis alone and adenosine 6-fold; AOPCP returned the medium adenosine to the level seen with hypoxia alone. These data suggest that VECs release intracellularly formed adenosine in hypoxia, ATP during acidosis, and both under simulated ischaemic conditions, with further extracellular conversion of ATP to adenosine.  相似文献   

19.
Stimulus-induced release of endogenous ATP into the extracellular milieu has been shown to occur in a variety of cells, tissues, and organs. Extracellular ATP can propagate signals via P2 receptors that are essential for growth and survival of cells. Abundance of P2 receptors, their multiple isoforms, and their ubiquitous distribution indicate that they transmit vital signals. Pulmonary epithelium and endothelium are rich in both P2X and P2Y receptors. ATP release from lung tissue and cells occurs upon stimulation both in vivo and in vitro. Extracellular ATP can activate signaling cascades composed of protein kinases including extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) and phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase (PI3K). Here we summarize progress related to release of endogenous ATP and nucleotide signaling in pulmonary tissues upon exposure to oxidant stress. Hypoxic, hyperoxic, and ozone exposures cause a rapid increase of extracellular ATP in primary pulmonary endothelial and epithelial cells. Extracellular ATP is critical for survival of these cells in high oxygen and ozone concentrations. The released ATP, upon binding to its specific receptors, triggers ERK and PI3K signaling and renders cells resistant to these stresses. Impairment of ATP release and transmission of such signals could limit cellular survival under oxidative stress. This may further contribute to disease pathogenesis or exacerbation.  相似文献   

20.
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