학술논문

Cytokine-induced F-actin reorganization in endothelial cells involves RhoA activation
Document Type
Report
Author abstract
Source
The American Journal of Physiology. March, 2009, Vol. 296 Issue 3, pF487, 9 p.
Subject
United States
Language
English
ISSN
0002-9513
Abstract
Acute ischemic kidney injury results in marked increases in local and systemic cytokine levels. IL-1[alpha], IL-6, and TNF-[alpha] orchestrate various inflammatory reactions influencing endothelial permeability by altering cell-to-cell and cell-to-extracellular matrix attachments. To explore the role of actin and the regulatory proteins RhoA and cofilin in this process, microvascular endothelial cells (MS1) were exposed to individual cytokines or a cytokine cocktail. Within minutes, a marked, time-dependent redistribution of the actin cytoskeleton occurred with the formation of long, dense F-actin basal stress fibers. The concentration of F-actin, normalized to nuclear staining, significantly increased compared with untreated cells (up 20%, P [less than or equal to] 0.05). Western blot analysis of MS1 lysates incubated with the cytokine cocktail for 4 h showed an increase in phosphorylated/inactive cofilin (up 25 [+ or -] 15%, P [less than or equal to] 0.05) and RhoA activation (up to 227 [+ or -] 26% increase, P [less than or equal to] 0.05) compared with untreated cells. Decreasing RhoA levels using small interfering RNA blocked the effect of cytokines on stress fiber organization. Treatment with Y-27632, an inhibitor of the RhoA effector pl60-ROCK, decreased levels of phosphorylated cofilin and reduced stress fiber fluorescence by 22%. In cells treated with Y-27632 followed by treatment with the cytokine cocktail, stress fiber levels were similar to control cells and cofilin phosphorylation was 55% of control levels. Taken together, these studies demonstrate cytokine stimulation of RhoA, which in turn leads to cofilin phosphorylation and formation of numerous basal actin stress fibers. These results suggest cytokines signal through the Rho-ROCK pathway, but also through another pathway to affect actin dynamics. ADF/cofilin; acute kidney injury; ischemia; pl60-ROCK; inflammation

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