Article

Lab Invest 2000, 80:1819–1831

Endothelial Barrier Function under Laminar Fluid Shear Stress

Jochen Seebach1, Peter Dieterich2, Fei Luo5, Hermann Schillers4, Dietmar Vestweber3, Hans Oberleithner4, Hans-Joachim Galla1 and Hans-Joachim Schnittler5

  1. 1Institut für Biochemie, WWU-Münster, Münster, Germany
  2. 2Rechenzentrum der Universität Würzburg, WWU-Münster, Dresden, Germany
  3. 3Zentrum für Molekularbiologie der Entzündung, WWU-Münster, Dresden, Germany
  4. 4Institut für Physiologie, WWU-Münster, Dresden, Germany
  5. 5Institut für Physiologie, Dresden, Germany

Correspondence: Dr. Hans-Joachim Schnittler, Institut für Physiologie, Fiedlerstrasse 42, D-01307 Dresden, Germany. Fax: 49 351 4586 301; E-mail: Hans.Schnittler@mailbox.tu-dresden.de

Received 3 July 2000.

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Abstract

It has been suggested that increasing levels of shear stress could modify endothelial permeability. This might be critical in venous grafting and in the pathogenesis of certain vascular diseases. We present a novel setup based on impedance spectroscopy that allows online investigation of the transendothelial electrical resistance (TER) under pure laminar shear stress. Shear stress–induced change in TER was associated with changes in cell motility and cell shape as a function of time (morphodynamics) and accompanied by a reorganization of catenins that regulate endothelial adherens junctions. Confluent cultures of porcine pulmonary trunk endothelial cells typically displayed a TER between 6 and 15 Omegacm2 under both resting conditions and low shear stress levels (0.5 dyn/cm2). Raising shear stress to the range of 2 to 50 dyn/cm2 caused a transient 2% to 15% increase in TER within 15 minutes that was accompanied by a reduction in cell motility. Subsequently, TER slowly decreased to a minimum of 20% below the starting value. During this period, acceleration of shape change occurred. In the ensuing period, TER values recovered, reaching control levels within hours and associated with an entire deceleration of shape change. A heterogeneous distribution of alpha-, beta-, and gamma-catenin, main components of the endothelial adherens type junctions, was also observed, indicating a differentiated regulation of shear stress–induced junction rearrangement. Additionally, catenins were partly colocalized with beta-actin at the plasma membrane, indicating migration activity of these subcellular parts. Shear stress, even at peak levels of 50 dyn/cm2, did not cause intercellular gap formation. These data show that endothelial monolayers exposed to increased levels of laminar shear stress respond with a shear stress–dependent regulation of permeability and a reorganization of junction-associated proteins, whereas monolayer integrity remains unaffected.

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