Endothelial Cells Exhibit Two Waves of P-selectin Surface Aggregation Under Endotoxic and Oxidative Conditions

Barrionuevo N.; Gatica S.; Olivares P.; Cabello-Verrugio C.; Simon F.

Abstract

Sepsis is a clinical syndrome characterized by the presence of circulating microbial endotoxins and oxidative stress. Endotoxin and oxidative stress activate endothelial cells via a convergent signaling pathway (TLR4/MyD88/PI3 K/PLC gamma/NF-B) that stimulates both the transcription of SELP gene (which encodes for human P-selectin) and the release of P-selectin from Weibel-Palade bodies (WPBs). However, time course pattern of P-selectin surface aggregation has not been established in endothelial cells under 24 h of endotoxic or oxidative stress. Our study shows that P-selectin has at least two waves of aggregation at the cell surface: one 10 min and the other 12 h after endotoxic or oxidative stress. The first wave depends exclusively on WPB delivery to the cell membrane, while the second depends on P-selectin translation machinery, ER-Golgi sorting, and WPB surface delivery. Understanding adhesion molecule dynamics in endothelial cells could provide further molecular insights to develop diagnostic or therapeutic tools to aid in the management of sepsis.

Más información

Título según WOS: Endothelial Cells Exhibit Two Waves of P-selectin Surface Aggregation Under Endotoxic and Oxidative Conditions
Título según SCOPUS: Endothelial Cells Exhibit Two Waves of P-selectin Surface Aggregation Under Endotoxic and Oxidative Conditions
Título de la Revista: PROTEIN JOURNAL
Volumen: 38
Número: 6
Editorial: Springer
Fecha de publicación: 2019
Página de inicio: 667
Página final: 674
Idioma: English
DOI:

10.1007/s10930-019-09865-0

Notas: ISI, SCOPUS