Vascular permeability factor/vascular endothelial growth factor stimulates endothelial proliferation, angiogenesis, and increased vascular permeability in vivo. We investigated mechanisms of vascular permeability factor-mediated endothelial monolayer permeability changes in vitro. [ 14 C]Albumin flux across endothelial monolayers was measured following a 90-min exposure to vascular permeability factor (660 pM). Vascular permeability factor increased albumin flux to 3.4 times that of control albumin flux. Endothelial monolayers were also incubated for 90 min with vascular permeability factor plus Gö 6976 (10 nM), staurosporine (1 M), wortmannin (10 nM), AG126 (1 and 2.67 M), and PD98059 (20 M). Vascular permeability factor-mediated permeability was not blocked by Gö 6976, an antagonist of "classical" protein kinase C, staurosporine, a pan-protein kinase C antagonist, nor wortmannin, a PI3-kinase blocker, but was blocked by incubation with AG126 or PD98059, inhibitors of mitogen-activated protein kinase activation. Immunofluorescent staining of the junctional proteins VE-cadherin and occludin showed a loss of these proteins from the endothelial junction that was prevented by co-incubation with AG126 or PD98059. These data demonstrate that vascular permeability factor increases albumin permeability across endothelial monolayers in vitro and suggests that permeability increases through rearrangement of endothelial junctional proteins involving the mitogen-activated protein kinase signal transduction pathway.
H(2)O(2)-mediated elevation in endothelial solute permeability is associated with pathological events such as ischemia-reperfusion and inflammation. To understand how H(2)O(2) mediates increased permeability, we investigated the effects of H(2)O(2) administration on vascular endothelial barrier properties and tight junction organization and function. We report that H(2)O(2) exposure caused an increase in endothelial solute permeability in a time-dependent manner through extracellularly regulated kinase 1 and 2 (ERK1/ERK2) signal pathways. H(2)O(2) exposure caused the tight junctional protein occludin to be rearranged from endothelial cell-cell junctions. Occludin rearrangement involved redistribution of occludin on the cell surface and dissociation of occludin from ZO-1. Occludin also was heavily phosphorylated on serine residues upon H(2)O(2) administration. H(2)O(2) mediates changes in ERK1/ERK2 phosphorylation, increases endothelial solute permeability, and alters occludin localization and phosphorylation were all blocked by PD-98059, a specific mitogen-activated protein (MAP) or ERK kinase 1 inhibitor. These data strongly suggest that H(2)O(2)-mediated increased endothelial solute permeability involves the loss of endothelial tight junction integrity through increased ERK1/ERK2 activation.
Studies aimed at elucidating the function of the protein synthesis factor eukaryotic initiation factor 4E (elF-4E) have demonstrated that overexpression of this protein results in marked cell phenotypic and proliferative changes, including neoplastic transformation of cells. These data suggest that elF-4E may somehow participate in the development and progression of tumors in vivo. In order to determine how elF-4E exerts its transforming effects, we examined vascular permeability factor (VPF) levels in cells transfected with an elF-4E vector. Cells overexpressing elF-4E showed an increase in intracellular, and an average 130-fold increase in secreted VPF protein levels (CHO 0.13 f 0.12 ng/ml; CHO-4E 20.5 2 12.5 ng/ml) over control cells. HUVEC growth induction revealed these VPF levels to be biologically active. Northern analysis revealed no difference in VPF transcript between the 2 cell lines. Polysome analysis showed that the VPF message in elf-4E-transfected cells was associated with the heavy polysomal regions, whereas the VPF message was associated with light polysomes in control cells. These data strongly suggest that enhanced VPF expression is achieved through translational regulation rather than transcriptional regulation in cells overexpressing elF-4E. This indicates that elf-4E-induced VPF expression may be an important factor in some forms of tumor angiogenesir and development.
Vascular endothelial permeability is maintained by the regulated apposition of adherens and tight junctional proteins whose organization is controlled by several pharmacological and physiological mediators. Endothelial permeability changes are associated with: (1) the spatial redistribution of surface cadherins and occludin, (2) stabilization of focal adhesive bonds and (3) the progressive activation of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs). In response to peroxide, histamine and EDTA, endothelial cells sequester VE-cadherin and alter its cytoskeletal binding. Simultaneously, these mediators enhance focal adhesion to the substratum. Oxidants, cytokines and pharmacological mediators also trigger the activation of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) in a cytoskeleton and tyrosine phosphorylation dependent manner to degrade occludin, a well-characterized tight junction element. These related in vitro phenomena appear to co-operate during inflammation, to increase endothelial permeability, structurally stabilize cells while also remodelling cell junctions and substratum.
In this report, we describe the inactivation and sitespecific light induction of plasmid expression using a photosensitive caging compound. Plasmids coding for luciferase were caged with 1-(4,5-dimethoxy-2-nitrophenyl)diazoethane (DMNPE) and transfected into ϳ1-cm diameter sites of the skin of rats with particle bombardment. Skin sites transfected with caged plasmids did not express luciferase. However, subsequent exposure of transfected skin sites to 355-nm laser light induced luciferase expression in proportion to the amount of light. Liposome transfection of HeLa cells with DMNPE-caged green fluorescent protein (GFP) plasmids showed similar results. Caging DNA with DMNPE blocks expression at the level of transcription, since in vitro production of mRNA from linearized GFP plasmid was also blocked by caging and subsequently restored by exposure to light. Under the reaction conditions of these experiments, our absorbance data indicate that each DMNPE-caged GFP plasmid contains ϳ270 caging groups. In addition to inhibition and subsequent restoration of plasmid bioactivity, the presence and photocleavage of this relatively small number of cage groups also alters electrophoretic mobility of plasmids and optical absorption characteristics. This light-induced expression strategy provides a new means to target the expression of genetic material with spatial and temporal specificity.
We recently demonstrated that methylglyoxal (MG) induced apoptosis of brain microvascular endothelial cells (IHECs) that was preceded by glutathione (GSH) depletion. Here, we test the hypothesis that MG induces occludin glycation and disrupts IHEC barrier function, which is prevented by GSH-dependent MG metabolism. Exposure of IHECs to MG decreased transendothelial electrical resistance (TEER) in association with MG-adduct formation. A 65-kDa MG-glycated protein corresponded to occludin, which was confirmed by immunoprecipitation. Moreover, immunofluorescence staining showed that MG disrupted the architectural organization of ZO-1. Occludin glycation and ZO-1 disruption were prevented by N-acetylcysteine (NAC). Accordingly, TEER loss was abrogated by NAC (via GSH synthesis) and exacerbated by buthionine sulfoximine (BSO; GSH synthesis inhibitor). BSO treatment attenuated d-lactate production, consistent with a role for GSH in glyoxalase I-catalyzed MG elimination. Although MG increased reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation, the ROS scavengers tempol and tiron did not block barrier disruption. This suggests that endogenously generated ROS were unlikely to be a major cause of or did not reach a threshold to elicit barrier failure as elicited by exogenous hydrogen peroxide (300–400 μM). Immunohistochemistry revealed a lower percentage of microvessels stained with anti-occludin, but a higher percentage stained with anti-MG in diabetic rat brain compared to controls. Western analyses confirmed the decrease in diabetic brain occludin expression, but an increase in glycated occludin levels. These results provide novel evidence that reactive carbonyl species can mediate occludin glycation in cerebral microvessels and in microvascular endothelial cells that contribute to barrier dysfunction, a process that was prevented by GSH through enhanced MG catabolism.
These data demonstrate that p38 MAP kinase activity is involved in hydrogen peroxide mediated permeability, stress fiber formation, and intracellular gap formation.
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a chronic inflammatory disorder characterized by increased leukocyte recruitment and subsequent tissue damage. An increase in the density of the microvasculature of the colon during IBD has been suggested, leading to the concept that angiogenesis may play a pathological role in IBD. Increased tissue and serum levels of the angiogenic cytokine VEGF-A have been reported in cases of active IBD. In this study, we examined the hypothesis that VEGF-A exerts a proinflammatory effect on colon microvascular endothelium that contributes to colonic inflammation. Leukocyte adhesion to VEGF-A-stimulated colon microvascular endothelial cells was examined using a parallel-plate hydrodynamic flow chamber. ICAM-1 adhesion molecule expression on colonic microvascular endothelium also was determined in response to VEGF-A stimulation, along with characterization of leukocyte adhesion molecule expression. High-dose VEGF-A (50 ng/ml) stimulation increased neutrophil and T cell adhesion to and decreased rolling velocities on activated endothelium, whereas low-dose VEGF-A (10 ng/ml) was without effect. Colonic endothelium constitutively expressed ICAM-1, which was significantly increased by treatment with 50 ng/ml VEGF-A or 10 ng/ml TNF-α but not 10 ng/ml VEGF-A. T cells expressed CD18 and CD11a with no expression of CD11b, whereas neutrophils expressed CD18, CD11a, and CD11b. Finally, VEGF-A-dependent leukocyte adhesion was found to occur in a CD18-dependent manner. These results demonstrate that VEGF-A levels found in IBD exert a proinflammatory effect similar to other inflammatory agents and suggest that this cytokine may serve as an intermediary between angiogenic stimulation and cell-mediated immune responses.
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