Endothelial heterogeneity across distinct vascular beds during homeostasis and inflammation
Autor: | Asrar B. Malik, Jalees Rehman, Yang Dai, Zhigang Hong, Shubhi Srivastava, Ankit Jambusaria, Peter T. Toth, Arundhati Jana, Lianghui Zhang |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
0301 basic medicine
Mouse Cell Gene Expression Transcriptome Mice 0302 clinical medicine Gene expression Homeostasis Biology (General) Lung General Neuroscience Brain systems biology General Medicine 3. Good health Cell biology endothelial heterogeneity medicine.anatomical_structure Medicine medicine.symptom Research Article Endothelium QH301-705.5 Science translatome Inflammation tissue specificity Biology Synaptic vesicle General Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology 03 medical and health sciences medicine Animals Humans RNA Messenger Human Biology and Medicine General Immunology and Microbiology Vascular disease Myocardium vascular biology medicine.disease Mice Inbred C57BL 030104 developmental biology inflammation Endothelium Vascular 030217 neurology & neurosurgery |
Zdroj: | eLife, Vol 9 (2020) eLife |
Popis: | Blood vessels are lined by endothelial cells engaged in distinct organ-specific functions but little is known about their characteristic gene expression profiles. RNA-Sequencing of the brain, lung, and heart endothelial translatome identified specific pathways, transporters and cell-surface markers expressed in the endothelium of each organ, which can be visualized at http://www.rehmanlab.org/ribo. We found that endothelial cells express genes typically found in the surrounding tissues such as synaptic vesicle genes in the brain endothelium and cardiac contractile genes in the heart endothelium. Complementary analysis of endothelial single cell RNA-Seq data identified the molecular signatures shared across the endothelial translatome and single cell transcriptomes. The tissue-specific heterogeneity of the endothelium is maintained during systemic in vivo inflammatory injury as evidenced by the distinct responses to inflammatory stimulation. Our study defines endothelial heterogeneity and plasticity and provides a molecular framework to understand organ-specific vascular disease mechanisms and therapeutic targeting of individual vascular beds. eLife digest Blood vessels supply nutrients, oxygen and other key molecules to all of the organs in the body. Cells lining the blood vessels, called endothelial cells, regulate which molecules pass from the blood to the organs they supply. For example, brain endothelial cells prevent toxic molecules from getting into the brain, and lung endothelial cells allow immune cells into the lungs to fight off bacteria or viruses. Determining which genes are switched on in the endothelial cells of major organs might allow scientists to determine what endothelial cells do in the brain, heart, and lung, and how they differ; or help scientists deliver drugs to a particular organ. If endothelial cells from different organs switch on different groups of genes, each of these groups of genes can be thought of as a ‘genetic signature’ that identifies endothelial cells from a specific organ. Now, Jambusaria et al. show that brain, heart, and lung endothelial cells have distinct genetic signatures. The experiments used mice that had been genetically modified to have tags on their endothelial cells. These tags made it possible to isolate RNA – a molecule similar to DNA that contains the information about which genes are active – from endothelial cells without separating the cells from their tissue of origin. Next, RNA from endothelial cells in the heart, brain and lung was sequenced and analyzed. The results show that each endothelial cell type has a distinct genetic signature under normal conditions and infection-like conditions. Unexpectedly, the experiments also showed that genes that were thought to only be switched on in the cells of specific tissues are also on in the endothelial cells lining the blood vessels of the tissue. For example, genes switched on in brain cells are also active in brain endothelial cells, and genes allowing heart muscle cells to pump are also on in the endothelial cells of the heart blood vessels. The endothelial cell genetic signatures identified by Jambusaria et al. can be used as “postal codes” to target drugs to a specific organ via the endothelial cells that feed it. It might also be possible to use these genetic signatures to build organ-specific blood vessels from stem cells in the laboratory. Future work will try to answer why endothelial cells serving the heart and brain use genes from these organs. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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