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. 1999 Aug;104(4):495-502.
doi: 10.1172/JCI6872.

Pressure is proinflammatory in lung venular capillaries

Affiliations

Pressure is proinflammatory in lung venular capillaries

W M Kuebler et al. J Clin Invest. 1999 Aug.

Abstract

Endothelial responses may contribute importantly to the pathology of high vascular pressure. In lung venular capillaries, we determined endothelial [Ca(2+)](i) by the fura-2 ratioing method and fusion pore formation by quantifying the fluorescence of FM1-43. Pressure elevation increased endothelial [Ca(2+)](i). Concomitantly evoked exocytotic events were evident in a novel spatial-temporal pattern of fusion pore formation. Fusion pores formed predominantly at vascular branch points and colocalized with the expression of P-selectin. Blockade of mechanogated Ca(2+) channels inhibited these responses, identifying entry of external Ca(2+) as the critical triggering mechanism. These endothelial responses point to a proinflammatory effect of high vascular pressure that may be relevant in the pathogenesis of pressure-induced lung disease.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Endothelial [Ca2+]i in lung venular capillaries. (a) Images are of the 340:380 ratio color-coded for [Ca2+]i. Images were obtained at PLA of 5 cmH2O (left) and after 30 minutes of PLA increase to 20 cmH2O (right). Endothelial [Ca2+]i is given for a single cell (arrowheads). Replicated in 9 capillaries. (b) Group data are shown as 5-minute averages at PLA of 5 cmH2O and after 30 minutes of PLA increase to 20 cmH2O. Infusions of gadolinium (n = 4) or Ca2+-free dextran (n = 4) were started 10 minutes before pressure elevation. *P < 0.05 vs. PLA of 5 cmH2O; #P < 0.05 vs. control (n = 9).
Figure 2
Figure 2
Fusion pore formation in lung venular capillaries. (a) Images of a single capillary taken at different PLA. PLA of 5 cmH2O. Images are before (top) and after (bottom) pressure elevation was obtained after 5 minutes of FM1-43 infusion. PLA of 20 cmH2O. Images were obtained at different time points after start of dye infusion. Color code shows fluorescence intensities. Capillary branch point (arrowheads) and midsegmental (arrow) locations are marked. Vessel margins are depicted by line sketches. Replicated in 8 capillaries. (b) After 30 minutes at PLA of 20 cmH2O, FM1-43 was infused into a lung venular capillary (horizontal bar) and then washed out by the blood flow (arrow). Shown is capillary fluorescence per unit surface area. Replicated in 8 capillaries. (c) Capillary fluorescence was quantified in pixels 5 × 5 μm2, at midsegmental and branch point locations after 5 minutes of FM1-43 infusion. Data were obtained at PLA of 5 cmH2O and after 30 minutes of PLA increase to 20 cmH2O in control (n = 8) and gadolinium-treated (n = 4) lungs. Gadolinium did not increase fluorescence above control at PLA of 5 cmH2O (not shown). *P < 0.05 vs. PLA of 5 cmH2O.
Figure 3
Figure 3
P-selectin expression in lung venular capillaries. (a) Images show indirect immunofluorescence of P-selectin at PLA of 5 cmH2O (left) and after 30 minutes of PLA increase to 20 cmH2O (right). Vessel margins are depicted by line sketch. Color code shows fluorescence intensities at branch point (arrowheads) and midsegmental (arrows) locations. Replicated in 8 capillaries. (b) P-selectin expression was quantified as the product of the mean fluorescence intensity and fluorescent area. The x-axis indicates period elapsed after a 1-minute washout of unbound FITC-IgG with blood flow. Data were obtained at PLA of 5 cmH2O (open symbols) and after 30 minutes of PLA increase to 20 cmH2O (filled symbols). Plots are control (circles; n = 8), 4°C (squares; n = 3), and gadolinium treatment (triangles; n = 4). Decay of P-selectin fluorescence was determined from the linear regression slope (P < 0.01 for all regressions).
Figure 4
Figure 4
[Ca2+]i dependence of fusion pore formation and P-selectin expression in lung venular capillaries. (a) Images of a pressure-stressed lung capillary at a branch point. After 30 minutes at PLA of 20 cmH2O, FM1-43 was infused for 5 minutes, and the capillary was imaged at a specific, landmarked location (top). Subsequently, FM1-43 fluorescence was photobleached by exposure to unfiltered mercury lamp illumination, and the capillary was stained for P-selectin expression and then reimaged at the identical location (bottom). Line sketches depict vessel margins. Replicated in 6 capillaries. (b) Single vessels were consecutively stained with FM1-43 for fusion pore detection and for indirect immunofluorescence of P-selectin at PLA of 5 and 20 cmH2O. Graph shows data from pixel-by-pixel analyses (pixel size: 5 × 5 μm2). Line was drawn by linear regression (rs = 0.781; P < 0.001; n = 11). (c) Endothelial [Ca2+]i was correlated with expressions of fusion pores and P-selectin. Data were obtained at PLA of 5 and 20 cmH2O. After determination of endothelial [Ca2+]i, fura-2 fluorescence was photobleached, and vessels were stained with FM1-43 for fusion pore fluorescence (open circles; n = 4) or for immunofluorescence of P-selectin (filled circles; n = 6). FM1-43 and P-selectin fluorescences were quantified in 5 × 5 μm2 pixels at sites of [Ca2+]i determination. Lines were drawn by linear regressions for FM1-43 (rs = 0.949; P < 0.001) and P-selectin (rs = 0.826; P < 0.001) against [Ca2+]i.

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