Literature DB >> 25659484

Aquaporin-1 facilitates pressure-driven water flow across the aortic endothelium.

Tieuvi Nguyen1, Jimmy Toussaint2, Yan Xue3, Chirag Raval1, Limary Cancel1, Stewart Russell1, Yixin Shou2, Omer Sedes2, Yu Sun2, Roman Yakobov2, John M Tarbell1, Kung-ming Jan4, David S Rumschitzki5.   

Abstract

Aquaporin-1, a ubiquitous water channel membrane protein, is a major contributor to cell membrane osmotic water permeability. Arteries are the physiological system where hydrostatic dominates osmotic pressure differences. In the present study, we show that the walls of large conduit arteries constitute the first example where hydrostatic pressure drives aquaporin-1-mediated transcellular/transendothelial flow. We studied cultured aortic endothelial cell monolayers and excised whole aortas of male Sprague-Dawley rats with intact and inhibited aquaporin-1 activity and with normal and knocked down aquaporin-1 expression. We subjected these systems to transmural hydrostatic pressure differences at zero osmotic pressure differences. Impaired aquaporin-1 endothelia consistently showed reduced engineering flow metrics (transendothelial water flux and hydraulic conductivity). In vitro experiments with tracers that only cross the endothelium paracellularly showed that changes in junctional transport cannot explain these reductions. Percent reductions in whole aortic wall hydraulic conductivity with either chemical blocking or knockdown of aquaporin-1 differed at low and high transmural pressures. This observation highlights how aquaporin-1 expression likely directly influences aortic wall mechanics by changing the critical transmural pressure at which its sparse subendothelial intima compresses. Such compression increases transwall flow resistance. Our endothelial and historic erythrocyte membrane aquaporin density estimates were consistent. In conclusion, aquaporin-1 significantly contributes to hydrostatic pressure-driven water transport across aortic endothelial monolayers, both in culture and in whole rat aortas. This transport, and parallel junctional flow, can dilute solutes that entered the wall paracellularly or through endothelial monolayer disruptions. Lower atherogenic precursor solute concentrations may slow their intimal entrainment kinetics.
Copyright © 2015 the American Physiological Society.

Entities:  

Keywords:  aorta; bioengineering; endothelium; hydraulic conductivity; tracer transport; transcellular transport

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25659484      PMCID: PMC4551120          DOI: 10.1152/ajpheart.00499.2014

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol        ISSN: 0363-6135            Impact factor:   4.733


  67 in total

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