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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0034063 (
pulmonary edema
)
10,665
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hypoxia triggers responses in endothelial cells that play roles in many conditions including high-altitude
pulmonary edema
and tumor angiogenesis. Signaling pathways activated by hypoxia modify cytoskeletal and contractile proteins and alter the biomechanical properties of endothelial cells. Intermediate filaments are major components of the cytoskeleton whose contribution to endothelial physiology is not well understood. We have previously shown that hypoxia-activated signaling in endothelial cells alters their contractility and adhesiveness. We have also linked p38-MAP kinase signaling pathway leading to
HSP27
phosphorylation and increased actin stress fiber formation to endothelial barrier augmentation. We now show that vimentin, a major intermediate filament protein in endothelial cells, is regulated by hypoxia. Our results indicate that exposure of endothelial cells to hypoxia causes vimentin filament networks to initially redistribute perinuclearly. However, by 1 hour hypoxia these networks reform and appear more continuous across cells than under normoxia. Hypoxia also causes transient changes in vimentin phosphorylation, and activation of PAK1, a kinase that regulates vimentin filament assembly. In addition, exposure to 1 hour hypoxia increases the ratio of insoluble/soluble vimentin. Overexpression of phosphomimicking mutant
HSP27
(pmHSP27) causes changes in vimentin distribution that are similar to those observed in hypoxic cells. Knocking-down
HSP27
destroys the vimentin filamentous network, and disrupting vimentin filaments with acrylamide increases endothelial permeability. Both hypoxia- and pmHSP27 overexpression-induced changes are reversed by inhibition of phosphatase activity. In conclusion hypoxia causes redistribution of vimentin to a more insoluble and extensive filamentous network that could play a role in endothelial barrier stabilization. Vimentin redistribution appears to be mediated through altering the phosphorylation of the protein and its interaction with
HSP27
.
...
PMID:Regulation of vimentin intermediate filaments in endothelial cells by hypoxia. 2042 12
F-actin rearrangement is an early event in burn-induced endothelial barrier dysfunction.
HSP27
, a target of p38 MAPK/MK2 pathway, plays an important role in actin dynamics through phosphorylation. The question of whether
HSP27
participates in burn-related endothelial barrier dysfunction has not been identified yet. Here, we showed that burn serum induced a temporal appearance of central F-actin stress fibers followed by a formation of irregular dense peripheral F-actin in pulmonary endothelial monolayer, concomitant with a transient increase of
HSP27
phosphorylation that conflicted with the persistent activation of p38 MAPK/MK2 unexpectedly. The appearance of F-actin stress fibers and transient increase of
HSP27
phosphorylation occurred prior to the burn serum-induced endothelial hyperpermeability. Overexpressing phospho-mimicking
HSP27
(
HSP27
(Asp)) reversed the burn serum-induced peripheral F-actin rearrangement with the augmentation of central F-actin stress fibers, and more importantly, attenuated the burn serum-induced endothelial hyperpermeability; such effects were not observed by
HSP27
(Ala), a non-phosphorylated mutant of
HSP27
.
HSP27
(Asp) overexpression also rendered the monolayer more resistant to barrier disruption caused by Cytochalasin D, a chemical reagent that depolymerizes F-actin specifically. Further study showed that phosphatases and sumoylation-inhibited MK2 activity contributed to the blunting of
HSP27
phosphorylation during the burn serum-induced endothelial hyperpermeability. Our study identifies
HSP27
phosphorylation as a protective response against burn serum-induced endothelial barrier dysfunction, and suggests that targeting
HSP27
wound be a promising therapeutic strategy in ameliorating burn-induced
lung edema
and shock development.
...
PMID:HSP27 phosphorylation protects against endothelial barrier dysfunction under burn serum challenge. 2602 60