4.5 Article

GEF-H1 is involved in agonist-induced human pulmonary endothelial barrier dysfunction

出版社

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajplung.00259.2005

关键词

thrombin; permeability; cytoskeleton; microtubules; pulmonary endothelium; guanine nucleotide exchange factor

资金

  1. NHLBI NIH HHS [HL-075349, HL-076259, HL-58064, HL-67307, HL-68062] Funding Source: Medline

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Endothelial cell (EC) permeability is precisely controlled by cytoskeletal elements [actin filaments, microtubules (MT), intermediate filaments] and cell contact protein complexes (focal adhesions, adherens junctions, tight junctions). We have recently shown that the edemagenic agonist thrombin caused partial MT disassembly, which was linked to activation of small GTPase Rho, Rho-mediated actin remodeling, cell contraction, and dysfunction of lung EC barrier. GEF- H1 is an MT-associated Rho-specific guanosine nucleotide (GDP/GTP) exchange factor, which in MT-unbound state stimulates Rho activity. In this study we tested hypothesis that GEF- H1 may be a key molecule involved in Rho activation, myosin light chain phosphorylation, actin remodeling, and EC barrier dysfunction associated with partial MT disassembly. Our results show that depletion of GEF- H1 or expression of dominant negative GEF- H1 mutant significantly attenuated permeability increase, actin stress fiber formation, and increased MLC and MYPT1 phosphorylation induced by thrombin or MT-depolymerizing agent nocodazole. In contrast, expression of wild-type or activated GEF-H1 mutants dramatically enhanced thrombin and nocodazole effects on stress fiber formation and cell retraction. These results show a critical role for the GEF- H1 in the Rho activation caused by MT disassembly and suggest GEF- H1 as a key molecule involved in cross talk between MT and actin cytoskeleton in agonist- induced Rho-dependent EC barrier regulation.

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