Mechano-oxidative coupling by mitochondria induces proinflammatory responses in lung venular capillaries

Elevation of lung capillary pressure causes exocytosis of the leukocyte adhesion receptor P-selectin in endothelial cells (ECs), indicating that lung ECs generate a proinflammatory response to pressure-induced stress. To define underlying mechanisms, we followed the EC signaling sequence leading to...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of clinical investigation 2003-03, Vol.111 (5), p.691-699
Hauptverfasser: Ichimura, Hideo, Parthasarathi, Kaushik, Quadri, Sadiqa, Issekutz, Andrew C., Bhattacharya, Jahar
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Elevation of lung capillary pressure causes exocytosis of the leukocyte adhesion receptor P-selectin in endothelial cells (ECs), indicating that lung ECs generate a proinflammatory response to pressure-induced stress. To define underlying mechanisms, we followed the EC signaling sequence leading to P-selectin exocytosis through application of real-time, in situ fluorescence microscopy in lung capillaries. Pressure elevation increased the amplitude of cytosolic Ca 2+ oscillations that triggered increases in the amplitude of mitochondrial Ca 2+ oscillations and in reactive oxygen species (ROS) production. Responses to blockers of the Ca 2+ oscillations and of mitochondrial electron transport indicated that the ROS production was Ca 2+ dependent and of mitochondrial origin. A new proinflammatory mechanism was revealed in that pressure-induced exocytosis of P-selectin was inhibited by both antioxidants and mitochondrial inhibitors, indicating that the exocytosis was driven by mitochondrial ROS. In this signaling pathway mitochondria coupled pressure-induced Ca 2+ oscillations to the production of ROS that in turn acted as diffusible messengers to activate P-selectin exocytosis. These findings implicate mitochondrial mechanisms in the lung’s proinflammatory response to pressure elevation and identify mitochondrial ROS as critical to P-selectin exocytosis in lung capillary ECs.
ISSN:0021-9738
DOI:10.1172/JCI200317271