4.4 Article

Calpain- and talin-dependent control of microvascular pericyte contractility and cellular stiffness

期刊

MICROVASCULAR RESEARCH
卷 80, 期 3, 页码 339-348

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.mvr.2010.07.012

关键词

AFM; Actin; Angiogenesis; Capillary; Cytoskeleton; Cell shape; Extracellular matrix; Diabetic retinopathy; Focal adhesions; Macular degeneration; Mechanotransduction

资金

  1. US National Science Foundation
  2. US National Defense Science and Engineering
  3. Singapore-MIT Alliance in Research & Technology BioSyM
  4. NIH [EY 19533, EY 15125]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Pericytes surround capillary endothelial cells and exert contractile forces modulating microvascular tone and endothelial growth. We previously described pericyte contractile phenotype to be Rho GTPase- and alpha-smooth muscle actin (alpha SMA)-dependent. However, mechanisms mediating adhesion-dependent shape changes and contractile force transduction remain largely equivocal. We now report that the neutral cysteine protease, calpain, modulates pericyte contractility and cellular stiffness via talin, an integrin-binding and F-actin associating protein. Digital imaging and quantitative analyses of living cells reveal significant perturbations in contractile force transduction detected via deformation of silicone substrata, as well as perturbations of mechanical stiffness in cellular contractile subdomains quantified via atomic force microscope (AFM)-enabled nanoindentation. Pericytes overexpressing GFP-tagged talin show significantly enhanced contractility (similar to two-fold), which is mitigated when either the calpain-cleavage resistant mutant talin L432G or vinculin are expressed. Moreover, the cell-penetrating, calpain-specific inhibitor termed CALPASTAT reverses talin-enhanced, but not Rho GTP-dependent, contractility. Interestingly, our analysis revealed that CALPASTAT, but not its inactive mutant, alters contractile cell-driven substrata deformations while increasing mechanical stiffness of subcellular contractile regions of these pericytes. Altogether, our results reveal that calpain-dependent cleavage of talin modulates cell contractile dynamics, which in pericytes may prove instrumental in controlling normal capillary function or microvascular pathophysiology. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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