Molecular Medicine |
From the Institute of Pathophysiology (A.S., D.D., J.H., H.M.), Martin Luther University, Halle, and the Department of Cardiovascular Physiology (M.C., M.H.), University of Goettingen, Germany. Present address of A.S. is Heart Center, University Leipzig, Germany.
Correspondence to Henning Morawietz, PhD, Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg, Institute of Pathophysiology, Magdeburger Strasse 18, D-06097 Halle, Germany. E-mail henning.morawietz{at}medizin.uni-halle.de
AbstractThe
flowing blood generates shear stress at the endothelial cell surface.
The endothelial cells modify their phenotype by alterations in gene
expression in response to different levels of fluid shear stress. To
identify genes involved in this process, human umbilical vein
endothelial cells were exposed to laminar shear stress (venous or
arterial levels) in a cone-and-plate apparatus for 24 hours. Using the
method of RNA arbitrarily primed polymerase chain reaction, we cloned a
polymerase chain reaction fragment representing an mRNA species
downregulated by arterial compared with venous shear stress (shear
stress downregulated gene-1, SSD-1). According to Northern blot
analysis, corresponding SSD-1 cDNA clones revealed a similar,
time-dependent downregulation after 24 hours of arterial shear stress
compared with venous shear stress or static controls. Three SSD-1 mRNA
species of 2.8, 4.1, and 4.6 kb were expressed in a tissue-specific
manner. The encoded amino acid sequence of the human endothelial SSD-1
isoform (4.1-kb mRNA species) revealed 80.4% identity and 90.9%
homology to the bovine ß-tubulin folding cofactor D (tfcD) gene.
Downregulation of tfcD mRNA expression by shear stress was defined at
the level of transcription by nuclear run-on assays. The tfcD protein
was downregulated by arterial shear stress. The shear stressdependent
downregulation of tfcD mRNA and protein was attenuated by the NO
synthase inhibitor
N
-nitro-L-arginine
methyl ester. Furthermore, the NO donor DETA-NO downregulated tfcD
mRNA. Because tfcD was shown to be a microtubule-destabilizing protein,
our data suggest a shear stressdependent regulation of the
microtubular dynamics in human endothelial
cells.
Key Words: endothelial cells shear stress RNA arbitrarily primed polymerase chain reaction ß-tubulin folding cofactor D nitric oxide
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