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1.
Stem cell transplantation is an appealing potential therapy for vascular diseases and an indispensable key step in vascular tissue engineering. Substantial effort has been made to differentiate stem cells toward vascular cell phenotypes, including endothelial cells (ECs) and smooth muscle cells. The microenvironment of vascular cells not only contains biochemical factors that influence differentiation but also exerts hemodynamic forces, such as shear stress and cyclic strain. More recently, studies have shown that shear stress can influence the differentiation of stem cells toward ECs. A deep understanding of the responses and underlying mechanisms involved in this process is essential for clinical translation. This review highlights current data supporting the role of shear stress in stem cell differentiation into ECs. Potential mechanisms and signaling cascades for transducing shear stress into a biological signal are proposed. Further study of stem cell responses to shear stress will be necessary to apply stem cells for pharmacological applications and cardiovascular implants in the realm of regenerative medicine.  相似文献   

2.
3.
The glycocalyx layer on the surface of an endothelial cell is an interface barrier for uptake of macromolecules, such as low-density lipoprotein and albumin, in the cell. The shear-dependent uptake of macromolecules thus might govern the function of the glycocalyx layer. We therefore studied the effect of glycocalyx on the shear-dependent uptake of macromolecules into endothelial cells. Bovine aorta endothelial cells were exposed to shear stress stimulus ranging from 0.5 to 3.0 Pa for 48 h. The albumin uptake into the cells was then measured using confocal laser scanning microscopy, and the microstructure of glycocalyx was observed using electron microscopy. Compared with the uptake into endothelial cells under static conditions (no shear stress stimulus), the albumin uptake at a shear stress of 1.0 Pa increased by 16% and at 3.0 Pa decreased by 27%. Compared with static conditions, the thickness of the glycocalyx layer increased by 70% and the glycocalyx charge increased by 80% at a shear stress of 3.0 Pa. The albumin uptake at a shear stress of 3.0 Pa for cells with a neutralized (no charge) glycocalyx layer was almost twice that of cells with charged layer. These findings indicate that glycocalyx influences the albumin uptake at higher shear stress and that glycocalyx properties (thickness and charge level) are involved with the shear-dependent albumin uptake process.  相似文献   

4.
A microcarrier culture system was established for a large-scale production of functional human endothelial cells. It has been difficult to cultivate human endothelial cells in large quantities for the reasons that specific growth factor and extracellular matrix are required for the survival and proliferation of the cells and the life span of the primary cells are limited. A lot of studies have reported that the shear stress gives significant influences on the structure, growth rate and biological functions of endothelial cells. We aimed to develop a convenient microcarrier culture system for human endothelial cells which can reproduce the flow effects experienced in vivo or in vitro. In 200 mL volume culture, human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) could be serially sub-cultivated by optimizing the culture conditions such as shear strength, growth factor, beads and seeding cell concentration, serum concentration, and passage timing. The growth rate was enhanced depending on the shear strength and the life span of the cells was elongated until over 43PDL which is much longer than those of monolayer cultures. The cells maintained the diploidy of over 80% without obvious abnormal changes in the chromosomes. The serially sub-cultured microcarrier cells maintained various endothelial cell functions such as the syntheses of von Willebrand factor (vWf), prostacyclin and other biological substances, the expression of CD31, and the VEGF(165) dependent growth characteristic. The synthesis of biological products was affected by shear strength. In the case of prostacyclin, a different synthesis response was observed between steady flow and transiently reduced shear strength. The synthesis of endothelin-1 (ET-1) was down-regulated by increase of shear strength different from those of other products. The culture system was scaled up until 2 L volume under the optimum DO control. The cells synthesized IL-6 in response to shear strength. These results indicate that the established microcarrier system might be able to contribute to the supply of functional human endothelial cells for various medical applications such as the reconstruction of injured blood vessels caused by atherosclerosis or restenosis of coronary arteries after angioplasty, and the construction of an anti-coagulable artificial blood vessel or an artificial skin with good transplant-ability.  相似文献   

5.
Mechanical forces are important signals in the development and function of the heart and lung, growth of skin and muscle, and maintenance of cartilage and bone. The specific mechanical force “shear stress” has been implicated as playing a critical role in the physiological responses of blood vessels through endothelial cell signaling. More recently, studies have shown that shear stress can induce differentiation of stem cells toward both endothelial and bone‐producing cell phenotypes. This review will highlight current data supporting the role of shear stress in stem cell fate and will propose potential mechanisms and signaling cascades for transducing shear stress into a biological signal. © 2009 American Institute of Chemical Engineers Biotechnol. Prog., 2009  相似文献   

6.
Moss MS  Sisken B  Zimmer S  Anderson KW 《Biorheology》1999,36(5-6):359-371
The mechanical stimulus of shear stress has to date been neglected when studying the adhesion of cancer cells to the endothelium. Confluent monolayers of endothelial cells were subjected to either 4 or 15 hours of arterial shear stress. Adhesion of nonmetastatic (MCF-7) and highly metastatic (MDA-MB-435) human breast cancer cells was then quantified using a detachment assay carried out inside the parallel plate flow chamber. Four hours of shear stress exposure had no effect on adhesion. However, 15 hours of shear stress exposure led to marked changes in the ability of the endothelial monolayer to bind human breast cancer cells. An increase in adhesive strength was observed for nonmetastatic MCF-7 cells, while a decrease in adhesive strength was observed for highly metastatic MDA-MB-435 cells. Hence, endothelial shear stress stimulation does influence the adhesion of cancer cells to the endothelium and can have different effects on the adhesion of cancer cells with different metastatic potentials. Furthermore, adhesion of nonmetastatic and highly metastatic human breast cancer cells may be controlled by two different endothelial cell adhesion molecules that are differentially regulated by shear stress. Immunohistochemistry confirmed that shear stress did in fact differentially regulate endothelial cell adhesion molecule expression.  相似文献   

7.
A new cell culture system has been developed that reflects the vascular microenvironment. By means of this system the cultured cells are exposed not only to shear stress by the circulating culture medium, but also to an oxygen concentration gradient and certain critical blood components such as low-density lipoprotein (LDL) and monocytes. DNA microarray analysis was performed for human umbilical vein endothelial cells cultured in this system in the absence and presence of laminar flow at a low shear stress, 0.2 dyn/cm(2). In addition to shear stress, either an oxygen concentration gradient, or LDL (1 mg/ml), or both were applied. Many Nrf-2-regulating genes, such as heme oxygenase 1, NAD(P)H quinone oxidoreductase 1, solute carrier family 7 No. 11, and glutamate-cysteine ligase modifier subunit, were induced by laminar flow at very low shear stress regardless of the additional conditions. Certain genes were specifically affected by exposure to the oxygen gradient and/or LDL under shear stress, but the degree was very low. These results suggest that shear stress is the most critical factor affecting gene expression in endothelial cells and that Nrf-2-regulating proteins may contribute to protecting endothelial cells against other vascular stress. This system should provide highly relevant and useful information about both vascular physiology and pathology, in the latter on such urgent matters as the specific steps involved in atherogenesis.  相似文献   

8.
Vascular endothelial cell injury has been implicated in the onset of atherosclerosis. A number of previous studies have demonstrated that endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs), in particular late EPCs, play important roles in endothelial maintenance and repair. Recent evidence has revealed shear stress as a key regulator for EPC differentiation. However, the detailed events that contribute to the shear stress-induced EPC differentiation, in particular the mechanisms of mechanotransduction, remain to be identified. The present study was undertaken to further confirm the effects of shear stress on the late EPC differentiation, and to investigate the role of integrins in this procedure. Shear stress was observed to increase the expression of endothelial cell differentiation markers, such as vWF and CD31, in late EPCs isolated from rat bone marrow. Shear stress moreover enhanced the mRNA expression of integrin subunits β(1) and β(3) in a time-dependent manner, and also upregulated specific integrins in late EPCs plated on substrates containing various extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins. In addition, the shear stress-induced vWF and CD31 expression were found to be related to the levels of integrin β(1) and β(3), and were inhibited in late EPCs treated with RGD peptide (Gly-Arg-Gly-Asp-Asn-Pro, GRGDNP) that blocks the binding of integrins to the extracellular matrix. Additionally, this increase was also attenuated by both anti-β(1) integrin and anti-β(3) integrin antibodies. The integrin subunits β(1) and β(3) thus play important roles in regulating the shear stress-induced endothelial cell differentiation marker expression in late EPCs. This may provide novel insights into the mechanisms of mechanotransduction in shear stress-mediated late EPC differentiation.  相似文献   

9.
Endothelial cells are constantly exposed to fluid shear stresses that regulate vascular morphogenesis, homeostasis, and disease. The mechanical responses of endothelial cells to relatively high shear flow such as that characteristic of arterial circulation has been extensively studied. Much less is known about the responses of endothelial cells to slow shear flow such as that characteristic of venous circulation, early angiogenesis, atherosclerosis, intracranial aneurysm, or interstitial flow. Here we used a novel, to our knowledge, microfluidic technique to measure traction forces exerted by confluent vascular endothelial cell monolayers under slow shear flow. We found that cells respond to flow with rapid and pronounced increases in traction forces and cell-cell stresses. These responses are reversible in time and do not involve reorientation of the cell body. Traction maps reveal that local cell responses to slow shear flow are highly heterogeneous in magnitude and sign. Our findings unveil a low-flow regime in which endothelial cell mechanics is acutely responsive to shear stress.  相似文献   

10.
Biorheological views of endothelial cell responses to mechanical stimuli   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Sato M  Ohashi T 《Biorheology》2005,42(6):421-441
Vascular endothelial cells are located at the innermost layer of the blood vessel wall and are always exposed to three different mechanical forces: shear stress due to blood flow, hydrostatic pressure due to blood pressure and cyclic stretch due to vessel deformation. It is well known that endothelial cells respond to these mechanical forces and change their shapes, cytoskeletal structures and functions. In this review, we would like to mainly focus on the effects of shear stress and hydrostatic pressure on endothelial cell morphology. After applying fluid shear stress, cultured endothelial cells show marked elongation and orientation in the flow direction. In addition, thick stress fibers of actin filaments appear and align along the cell long axis. Thus, endothelial cell morphology is closely related to the cytoskeletal structure. Further, the dynamic course of the morphological changes is shown and the related events such as changes in mechanical stiffness and functions are also summarized. When endothelial cells were exposed to hydrostatic pressure, they exhibited a marked elongation and orientation in a random direction, together with development of centrally located, thick stress fibers. Pressured endothelial cells also exhibited a multilayered structure with less expression of VE-cadherin unlike under control conditions. Simultaneous loading of hydrostatic pressure and shear stress inhibited endothelial cell multilayering and induced elongation and orientation of endothelial cells with well-developed VE-cadherin in a monolayer, which suggests that for a better understanding of vascular endothelial cell responses one has to take into consideration the combination of the different mechanical forces such as exist under in vivo mechanical conditions.  相似文献   

11.
At present, little is known about how endothelial cells respond to spatial variations in fluid shear stress such as those that occur locally during embryonic development, at heart valve leaflets, and at sites of aneurysm formation. We built an impinging flow device that exposes endothelial cells to gradients of shear stress. Using this device, we investigated the response of microvascular endothelial cells to shear-stress gradients that ranged from 0 to a peak shear stress of 9–210 dyn/cm2. We observe that at high confluency, these cells migrate against the direction of fluid flow and concentrate in the region of maximum wall shear stress, whereas low-density microvascular endothelial cells that lack cell-cell contacts migrate in the flow direction. In addition, the cells align parallel to the flow at low wall shear stresses but orient perpendicularly to the flow direction above a critical threshold in local wall shear stress. Our observations suggest that endothelial cells are exquisitely sensitive to both magnitude and spatial gradients in wall shear stress. The impinging flow device provides a, to our knowledge, novel means to study endothelial cell migration and polarization in response to gradients in physical forces such as wall shear stress.  相似文献   

12.
At present, little is known about how endothelial cells respond to spatial variations in fluid shear stress such as those that occur locally during embryonic development, at heart valve leaflets, and at sites of aneurysm formation. We built an impinging flow device that exposes endothelial cells to gradients of shear stress. Using this device, we investigated the response of microvascular endothelial cells to shear-stress gradients that ranged from 0 to a peak shear stress of 9–210 dyn/cm2. We observe that at high confluency, these cells migrate against the direction of fluid flow and concentrate in the region of maximum wall shear stress, whereas low-density microvascular endothelial cells that lack cell-cell contacts migrate in the flow direction. In addition, the cells align parallel to the flow at low wall shear stresses but orient perpendicularly to the flow direction above a critical threshold in local wall shear stress. Our observations suggest that endothelial cells are exquisitely sensitive to both magnitude and spatial gradients in wall shear stress. The impinging flow device provides a, to our knowledge, novel means to study endothelial cell migration and polarization in response to gradients in physical forces such as wall shear stress.  相似文献   

13.
Pluripotent embryonic stem (ES) cells are capable of differentiating into all cell lineages, but the molecular mechanisms that regulate ES cell differentiation have not been sufficiently explored. In this study, we report that shear stress, a mechanical force generated by fluid flow, can induce ES cell differentiation. When Flk-1-positive (Flk-1(+)) mouse ES cells were subjected to shear stress, their cell density increased markedly, and a larger percentage of the cells were in the S and G(2)-M phases of the cell cycle than Flk-1(+) ES cells cultured under static conditions. Shear stress significantly increased the expression of the vascular endothelial cell-specific markers Flk-1, Flt-1, vascular endothelial cadherin, and PECAM-1 at both the protein level and the mRNA level, but it had no effect on expression of the mural cell marker smooth muscle alpha-actin, blood cell marker CD3, or the epithelial cell marker keratin. These findings indicate that shear stress selectively promotes the differentiation of Flk-1(+) ES cells into the endothelial cell lineage. The shear stressed Flk-1(+) ES cells formed tubelike structures in collagen gel and developed an extensive tubular network significantly faster than the static controls. Shear stress induced tyrosine phosphorylation of Flk-1 in Flk-1(+) ES cells that was blocked by a Flk-1 kinase inhibitor, SU1498, but not by a neutralizing antibody against VEGF. SU1498 also abolished the shear stress-induced proliferation and differentiation of Flk-1(+) ES cells, indicating that a ligand-independent activation of Flk-1 plays an important role in the shear stress-mediated proliferation and differentiation by Flk-1(+) ES cells.  相似文献   

14.
《Biophysical journal》2022,121(4):620-628
Hutchinson-Gilford progeria syndrome (HGPS) is a rare premature aging disease caused by a single-point mutation in the lamin A gene, resulting in a truncated and farnesylated form of lamin A. This mutant lamin A protein, known as progerin, accumulates at the periphery of the nuclear lamina, resulting in both an abnormal nuclear morphology and nuclear stiffening. Patients with HGPS experience rapid onset of atherosclerosis, with death from heart attack or stroke as teenagers. Progerin expression has been shown to cause dysfunction in both vascular smooth muscle cells and endothelial cells (ECs). In this study, we examined how progerin-expressing endothelial cells adapt to fluid shear stress, the principal mechanical force from blood flow. We compared the response to shear stress for progerin-expressing, wild-type lamin A overexpressing, and control endothelial cells to physiological levels of fluid shear stress. Additionally, we also knocked down ZMPSTE24 in endothelial cells, which results in increased farnesylation of lamin A and similar phenotypes to HGPS. Our results showed that endothelial cells either overexpressing progerin or with ZMPSTE24 knockdown were unable to adapt to shear stress, experiencing significant cell loss at a longer duration of exposure to shear stress (3 days). Endothelial cells overexpressing wild-type lamin A also exhibited similar impairments in adaptation to shear stress, including similar levels of cell loss. Quantification of nuclear morphology showed that progerin-expressing endothelial cells had similar nuclear abnormalities in both static and shear conditions. Treatment of progerin-expressing cells and ZMPSTE24 KD cells with lonafarnib and methystat, drugs previously shown to improve HGPS nuclear morphology, resulted in improvements in adaptation to shear stress. Additionally, the prealignment of cells to shear stress before progerin-expression prevented cell loss. Our results demonstrate that changes in nuclear lamins can affect the ability of endothelial cells to properly adapt to shear stress.  相似文献   

15.
The binding of circulating cells to the vascular wall is a central process in inflammation, metastasis, and therapeutic cell delivery. Previous in vitro studies have identified the adhesion molecules on various circulating cells and the endothelium that govern the process under static conditions. Other studies have attempted to simulate in vivo conditions by subjecting adherent cells to shear stress as they interact with the endothelial cells in vitro. These experiments are generally performed with the cells suspended in Newtonian solutions. However, in vivo conditions are more complex because of the non-Newtonian flow of blood, which is a suspension consisting of 20-40% erythrocytes by volume. The forces imparted by the erythrocytes in the flow can contribute to the process of cell adhesion. A number of experimental and theoretical studies have suggested that the rheology of blood can influence the binding of circulating leukocytes by increasing the normal and axial forces on leukocytes or the frequency of their collision with the vessel wall, but there have been no systematic investigations of these phenomena to date. The present study quantifies the contribution of red blood cells (RBCs) in cell capture and adhesion to endothelial monolayers using a combination of mathematical modeling and in vitro studies. Mathematical modeling of the flow experiments suggested a physical mechanism involving RBC-induced leukocyte dispersion and/or increased normal adhesive contact. Flow chamber studies performed with and without RBCs in the suspending medium showed increases in wall collision and binding frequencies, and a decrease in rolling velocity in the presence of erythrocytes. Increased fluid viscosity alone did not influence the binding frequency, and the differences could not be attributed to large near-wall excesses of the lymphocytes. The results indicate that RBCs aid in the transport and initial engagement of lymphocytes to the vascular wall, modifying the existing paradigm for immune cell surveillance of the vascular endothelium by adding the erythrocyte as an essential contributor to this process.  相似文献   

16.
Blood vessels are subject to fluid shear stress, a hemodynamic factor that inhibits the mitogenic activities of vascular cells. The presence of nonuniform shear stress has been shown to exert graded suppression of cell proliferation and induces the formation of cell density gradients, which in turn regulate the direction of smooth muscle cell (SMC) migration and alignment. Here, we investigated the role of platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF)-beta receptor and Src in the regulation of such processes. In experimental models with vascular polymer implants, SMCs migrated from the vessel media into the neointima of the implant under defined fluid shear stress. In a nonuniform shear model, blood shear stress suppressed the expression of PDGF-beta receptor and the phosphorylation of Src in a shear level-dependent manner, resulting in the formation of mitogen gradients, which were consistent with the gradient of cell density as well as the alignment of SMCs. In contrast, uniform shear stress in a control model elicited an even influence on the activity of mitogenic molecules without modulating the uniformity of cell density and did not significantly influence the direction of SMC alignment. The suppression of the PDGF-beta receptor tyrosine kinase and Src with pharmacological substances diminished the gradients of mitogens and cell density and reduced the influence of nonuniform shear stress on SMC alignment. These observations suggest that PDGF-beta receptor and Src possibly serve as mediating factors in nonuniform shear-induced formation of cell density gradients and alignment of SMCs in the neointima of vascular polymer implants.  相似文献   

17.
The migration of vascular endothelial cells in vivo occurs in a fluid dynamic environment due to blood flow, but the role of hemodynamic forces in cell migration is not yet completely understood. Here we investigated the effect of shear stress, the frictional drag of blood flowing over the cell surface, on the migration speed of individual endothelial cells on fibronectin-coated surfaces, as well as the biochemical and biophysical bases underlying this shear effect. Under static conditions, cell migration speed had a bell-shaped relationship with fibronectin concentration. Shear stress significantly increased the migration speed at all fibronectin concentrations tested and shifted the bell-shaped curve upwards. Shear stress also induced the activation of Rho GTPase and increased the traction force exerted by endothelial cells on the underlying substrate, both at the leading edge and the rear, suggesting that shear stress enhances both the frontal forward-pulling force and tail retraction. The inhibition of a Rho-associated kinase, p160ROCK, decreased the traction force and migration speed under both static and shear conditions and eliminated the shear-enhancement of migration speed. Our results indicate that shear stress enhances the migration speed of endothelial cells by modulating the biophysical force of tractions through the biochemical pathway of Rho-p160ROCK.  相似文献   

18.
Endothelial cells are capable of responding to fluid shear stress, but the molecular mechanism for this biological response remains largely unknown. Our studies indicate that the cell-cell adhesion site is a possible site of flow sensing. PECAM-1, a cell adhesion molecule localized to the interendothelial cell adhesion site, is tyrosine-phosphorylated when endothelial cells are exposed to physiological levels of fluid shear stress. This PE-CAM-1 phosphorylation initiates a signaling cascade leading to ERK activation. Here we review what is known about PECAM-1 tyrosine phosphorylation and suggest a possible role of PECAM-1 in mechanosensing by endothelial cells.  相似文献   

19.
Immunofluorescence microscopy was used to determine the number of endothelial cells with stress fibers for three age groups, and for three distinct anatomical locations within the descending thoracic aorta of both normotensive and spontaneously hypertensive rats. For each age group examined, hypertensive rats consistently demonstrated greater stress fiber expression than did normotensive rats. Neither age nor blood pressure was the predominant influence on stress fiber expression in aortic endothelium. In the normotensive rats, stress fiber expression remained unchanged for all age groups examined. For both strains, however, more endothelial cells with stress fibers were found in those regions where fluid shear stresses are expected to be high, when compared with those regions where the fluid shear stresses are expected to be low. This observation suggests that anatomical location, with its implied differences in fluid shear stress levels, is a major influence on stress fiber expression within this tissue. Electron microscopy was used to determine the intracellular distribution of stress fibers for both strains. Most stress fibers in both strains were located in the abluminal portion of the endothelial cells. This result is consistent with a role for stress fibers in cellular adhesion. However, the hypertensive rats had a higher proportion of stress fibers in the luminal portion of their cytoplasm than the normotensive rats. This increased presence of stress fibers in the luminal portion of the cell may be important in maintaining the structural integrity of the endothelial cell in the face of elevated hemodynamic forces in situ.  相似文献   

20.
An apparatus to study the response of cultured endothelium to shear stress   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
An apparatus which has been developed to study the response of cultured endothelial cells to a wide range of shear stress levels is described. Controlled laminar flow through a rectangular tube was used to generate fluid shear stress over a cell-lined coverslip comprising part of one wall of the tube. A finite element method was used to calculate shear stresses corresponding to cell position on the coverslip. Validity of the finite element analysis was demonstrated first by its ability to generate correctly velocity profiles and wall shear stresses for laminar flow in the entrance region between infinitely wide parallel plates (two-dimensional flow). The computer analysis also correctly predicted values for pressure difference between two points in the test region of the apparatus for the range of flow rates used in these experiments. These predictions thus supported the use of such an analysis for three-dimensional flow. This apparatus has been used in a series of experiments to confirm its utility for testing applications. In these studies, endothelial cells were exposed to shear stresses of 60 and 128 dynes/cm2. After 12 hr at 60 dynes/cm2, cells became aligned with their longitudinal axes parallel to the direction of flow. In contrast, cells exposed to 128 dynes/cm2 required 36 hr to achieve a similar reorientation. Interestingly, after 6 hr at 128 dynes/cm2, specimens passed through an intermediate phase in which cells were aligned perpendicular to flow direction. Because of its ease and use and the provided documentation of wall shear stress, this flow chamber should prove to be a valuable tool in endothelial research related to atherosclerosis.  相似文献   

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