Comparison of the Effects of Different Coating Matrices on Cell Binding and Nitric Oxide-Mediated Protein S-Nitrosylation in Endothelial Cells
under Shear Flow
Ming-Chung Lin, Ming-Wei Lin, Erna Sulistyowati, Ching-Chieh Kao, Chung-Jung Liu, Shu-Ping Huang, S. C. Hsu, Bin Huang
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Shear flow is a mechanical signal regulating the function of Endothelial
Cells (ECs). The present study aimed to investigate the effects of different matrices on cell binding,
Nitric Oxide (NO) production, protein S-nitrosylation, expression of adhesion proteins, ROS
generation, and cell viability in ECs under shear flow.
The ECs growing on glass slides separately coated with poly-L-lysine (p-Lys), collagen
(Colla), fibronectin (Fibro), and a combined matrix (Colla+Fibro) were exposed to shear flow (25
dyne/cm2) for 0, 1, 4, 8 h. The number of ECs remaining attached on the glass slide was calculated.
The expressions of endothelial Nitric Oxide Synthase (eNOS), peNOSS1177, VE-cadherin, FAK,
and S-nitrosylated proteins were investigated by western blotting. The production of Nitric Oxide
(NO) was measured by a specific reagent. Finally, the levels of ROS and cell viability were monitored.
Under a constant shear flow for 1 h, the physiological responses of ECs were similar between
these four matrices. When shear flow was extended to 4 and 8 h, higher cell binding, elevated
NO production, increased S-nitrosylated proteins, enhanced expressions of FAK and VE-cadherin,
mildly accumulated ROS, and cell death were observed in the matrix of Fibro and Colla+Fibro.
We have concluded fibronectin to be the optimal matrix facilitating NO-mediated Snitrosylation
that might be essential for superior binding efficiency, thereby preventing the stripping
of ECs under shear flow. The results can be broadly applied to diverse biomechanical
studies.