Skip to content

Endothelial Cilia Are Fluid Shear Sensors That Regulate Calcium Signaling and Nitric Oxide Production Through Polycystin-1

Surya M Nauli, Yoshifumi Kawanabe, John J Kaminski, William J Pearce, Donald E Ingber, Jing Zhou
Key takeaways
  1. 01Endothelial cilia act as sensors for fluid shear stress
  2. 02This sensing triggers calcium signaling and nitric oxide production
  3. 03The protein polycystin-1 is essential for this function
  4. 04Proper cilia structure and protein location are crucial

Tiny cilia on blood vessel cells sense blood flow, triggering signals that help regulate vascular tone and health.

Abstract

Background When challenged with extracellular fluid shear stress, vascular endothelial cells are known to release nitric oxide, an important vasodilator. Here, we show that the ability of cultured endothelial cells to sense a low range of fluid shear depends on apical membrane organelles, called cilia, and that cilia are compartments required for proper localization and function of the mechanosensitive polycystin-1 molecule. Methods and Results Cells with the Pkd1null/null or Tg737orpk/orpk mutation encoded for polycystin-1 or polaris, respectively, are unable to transmit extracellular shear stress into intracellular calcium signaling and biochemical nitric oxide synthesis. Cytosolic calcium and nitric oxide recordings further show that fluid shear sensing is a cilia-specific mechanism because other mechanical or pharmacological stimulation does not abolish calcium and nitric oxide signaling in polycystin-1 and polaris mutant endothelial cells. Polycystin-1 localized in the basal body of Tg737orpk/orpk endothelial cells is insufficient for a fluid shear stress response. Furthermore, the optimal shear stress to which the cells respond best does not alter the apical cilia structure but modifies the responsiveness of cells to higher shear stresses through proteolytic modification of polycystin-1. Conclusions We demonstrate for the first time that polycystin-1 (required for cilia function) and polaris (required for cilia structure) are crucial mechanosensitive molecules in endothelial cells. We propose that a distinctive communication with the extracellular microenvironment depends on the proper localization and function of polycystin-1 in cilia.

Cite this study
APA
Surya M Nauli, Yoshifumi Kawanabe, John J Kaminski, William J Pearce, Donald E Ingber, & Jing Zhou (2008). Endothelial Cilia Are Fluid Shear Sensors That Regulate Calcium Signaling and Nitric Oxide Production Through Polycystin-1. https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/endothelial-cilia-are-fluid-shear-sensors-that-regulate-calcium-signaling-and-nitric-oxide-production-through-polycystin-1/
MLA
Surya M Nauli, et al. "Endothelial Cilia Are Fluid Shear Sensors That Regulate Calcium Signaling and Nitric Oxide Production Through Polycystin-1." 2008, https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/endothelial-cilia-are-fluid-shear-sensors-that-regulate-calcium-signaling-and-nitric-oxide-production-through-polycystin-1/.
Chicago
Surya M Nauli et al. 2008. "Endothelial Cilia Are Fluid Shear Sensors That Regulate Calcium Signaling and Nitric Oxide Production Through Polycystin-1.". https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/endothelial-cilia-are-fluid-shear-sensors-that-regulate-calcium-signaling-and-nitric-oxide-production-through-polycystin-1/