Endothelial responses to shear stress in atherosclerosis: a novel role for developmental genes.
Celine SouilholJovana Serbanovic-CanicMaria FragiadakiTimothy J ChicoVictoria RidgerHannah Grace RoddiePaul C EvansPublished in: Nature reviews. Cardiology (2019)
Flowing blood generates a frictional force called shear stress that has major effects on vascular function. Branches and bends of arteries are exposed to complex blood flow patterns that exert low or low oscillatory shear stress, a mechanical environment that promotes vascular dysfunction and atherosclerosis. Conversely, physiologically high shear stress is protective. Endothelial cells are critical sensors of shear stress but the mechanisms by which they decode complex shear stress environments to regulate physiological and pathophysiological responses remain incompletely understood. Several laboratories have advanced this field by integrating specialized shear-stress models with systems biology approaches, including transcriptome, methylome and proteome profiling and functional screening platforms, for unbiased identification of novel mechanosensitive signalling pathways in arteries. In this Review, we describe these studies, which reveal that shear stress regulates diverse processes and demonstrate that multiple pathways classically known to be involved in embryonic development, such as BMP-TGFβ, WNT, Notch, HIF1α, TWIST1 and HOX family genes, are regulated by shear stress in arteries in adults. We propose that mechanical activation of these pathways evolved to orchestrate vascular development but also drives atherosclerosis in low shear stress regions of adult arteries.
Keyphrases
- blood flow
- endothelial cells
- genome wide
- cardiovascular disease
- single cell
- bioinformatics analysis
- gene expression
- palliative care
- dna methylation
- rna seq
- oxidative stress
- mesenchymal stem cells
- type diabetes
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- transforming growth factor
- high glucose
- single molecule
- vascular endothelial growth factor