Under pressure: altered endothelial flow response.
Christian MandryckyTakashi IshidaSamuel RaynerAdam HeckBrandon HadlandYing ZhengPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
Blood flow within the vasculature is a critical determinant of endothelial cell (EC) identity and functionality, yet the intricate interplay of various hemodynamic forces and their collective impact on endothelial and vascular responses are not fully understood. Specifically, the role of hydrostatic pressure in the context of flow response is understudied, despite its known significance in vascular development and disease. To address this gap, we developed in vitro models to investigate how pressure influences EC responses to flow. Our study demonstrates that elevated pressure conditions significantly modify shear-induced flow alignment and increase endothelial cell density. However, RNA sequencing revealed that flow remains as the primary driver of transcriptional changes from static conditions with slight modulation by pressure. Single-cell RNA sequencing identified a dose-dependent transcriptional shift in response to pressure. These pressure-responsive transcriptional signatures identified in human ECs were conserved during the onset of circulation in early mouse embryonic vascular development, where pressure was notably associated with transcriptional programs essential to arterial and hemogenic EC fates. Our findings suggest that pressure plays a synergistic role with the shear stress on endothelial cells and emphasize the necessity of an integrative approach to endothelial cell mechanotransduction, one that encompasses the effects induced by pressure alongside other hemodynamic forces.