Peri/Epicellular Protein Disulfide Isomerase Sustains Vascular Lumen Caliber Through an Anticonstrictive Remodeling Effect

Tanaka, Leonardo Y.; Araujo, Haniel A.; Hironaka, Gustavo K.; Araujo, Thais L. S.; Takimura, Celso K.; Rodriguez, Andres I.; Casagrande, Annelise S.; Gutierrez, Paulo S.; Lemos-Neto, Pedro Alves; Laurindo, Francisco R. M.

Abstract

Whole-vessel remodeling critically determines lumen caliber in vascular (patho)physiology, and it is reportedly redox-dependent. We hypothesized that the cell-surface pool of the endoplasmic reticulum redox chaperone protein disulfide isomerase-A1 (peri/epicellular=pecPDI), which is known to support thrombosis, also regulates disease-associated vascular architecture. In human coronary atheromas, PDI expression inversely correlated with constrictive remodeling and plaque stability. In a rabbit iliac artery overdistension model, there was unusually high PDI upregulation (approximate to 25-fold versus basal, 14 days postinjury), involving both intracellular and pecPDI. PecPDI neutralization with distinct anti-PDI antibodies did not enhance endoplasmic reticulum stress or apoptosis. In vivo pecPDI neutralization with PDI antibody-containing perivascular gel from days 12 to 14 post injury promoted 25% decrease in the maximally dilated arteriographic vascular caliber. There was corresponding whole-vessel circumference loss using optical coherence tomography without change in neointima, which indicates constrictive remodeling. This was accompanied by decreased hydrogen peroxide generation. Constrictive remodeling was corroborated by marked changes in collagen organization, that is, switching from circumferential to radial fiber orientation and to a more rigid fiber type. The cytoskeleton architecture was also disrupted; there was a loss of stress fiber coherent organization and a switch from thin to medium thickness actin fibers, all leading to impaired viscoelastic ductility. Total and PDI-associated expressions of 1-integrin, and levels of reduced cell-surface 1-integrin, were diminished after PDI antibody treatment, implicating 1-integrin as a likely pecPDI target during vessel repair. Indeed, focal adhesion kinase phosphorylation, a downstream 1-integrin effector, was decreased by PDI antibody. Thus, the upregulated pecPDI pool tunes matrix/cytoskeleton reshaping to counteract inward remodeling in vascular pathophysiology.

Más información

Título según WOS: ID WOS:000369755200025 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: HYPERTENSION
Volumen: 67
Número: 3
Editorial: LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
Fecha de publicación: 2016
Página de inicio: 613
Página final: 622
DOI:

10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.115.06177

Notas: ISI