4.8 Article

Direct evidence for the role of caveolin-1 and caveolae in mechanotransduction and remodeling of blood vessels

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION
Volume 116, Issue 5, Pages 1284-1291

Publisher

AMER SOC CLINICAL INVESTIGATION INC
DOI: 10.1172/JCI27100

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NHLBI NIH HHS [P01 HL070295, P01 HL70295, R01 HL061371, R01 HL083249-01, R01 HL083249, R01 HL057665, R01 HL61371, R01 HL64793, R01 HL065418, R01 HL065418-04, R01 HL064793, R01 HL57665] Funding Source: Medline

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Caveolae in endothelial cells have been implicated as plasma membrane microdomains that sense or transduce hemodynamic changes into biochemical signals that regulate vascular function. Therefore we compared longand short-term flow-mediated mechanotransduction in vessels from WT mice, caveolin-1 knockout (Cav-1 KO) mice, and Cav-1 KO mice reconstituted with a transgene expressing Cav-1 specifically in endothelial cells (Cav-1 RC mice). Arterial remodeling during chronic changes in flow and shear stress were initially examined in these mice. Ligation of the left external carotid for 14 days to lower blood flow in the common carotid artery reduced the lumen diameter of carotid arteries from VVT and Cav-1 RC mice. In Cav-1 KO mice, the decrease in blood flow did not reduce the lumen diameter but paradoxically increased wall thickness and cellular proliferation. In addition, in isolated pressurized carotid arteries, flow-mediated dilation was markedly reduced in Cav-1 KO arteries compared with those of V7T mice. This impairment in response to flow was rescued by reconstituting Cav-1 into the endothehum. In conclusion, these results showed that endothelial Cav- 1 and caveolae are necessary for both rapid and long-term mechanotransduction in intact blood vessels.

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