|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Mapping the Endothelial Cell <i>S</i>-Sulfhydrome Highlights the Crucial Role of Integrin Sulfhydration in Vascular Function.

First Author  Bibli SI Year  2021
Journal  Circulation Volume  143
Issue  9 Pages  935-948
PubMed ID  33307764 Mgi Jnum  J:325022
Mgi Id  MGI:7264715 Doi  10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.120.051877
Citation  Bibli SI, et al. (2021) Mapping the Endothelial Cell S-Sulfhydrome Highlights the Crucial Role of Integrin Sulfhydration in Vascular Function. Circulation 143(9):935-948
abstractText  BACKGROUND: In vascular endothelial cells, cysteine metabolism by the cystathionine gamma lyase (CSE), generates hydrogen sulfide-related sulfane sulfur compounds (H2Sn), that exert their biological actions via cysteine S-sulfhydration of target proteins. This study set out to map the "S-sulfhydrome" (ie, the spectrum of proteins targeted by H2Sn) in human endothelial cells. METHODS: Liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometry was used to identify S-sulfhydrated cysteines in endothelial cell proteins and beta3 integrin intraprotein disulfide bond rearrangement. Functional studies included endothelial cell adhesion, shear stress-induced cell alignment, blood pressure measurements, and flow-induced vasodilatation in endothelial cell-specific CSE knockout mice and in a small collective of patients with endothelial dysfunction. RESULTS: Three paired sample sets were compared: (1) native human endothelial cells isolated from plaque-free mesenteric arteries (CSE activity high) and plaque-containing carotid arteries (CSE activity low); (2) cultured human endothelial cells kept under static conditions or exposed to fluid shear stress to decrease CSE expression; and (3) cultured endothelial cells exposed to shear stress to decrease CSE expression and treated with solvent or the slow-releasing H2Sn donor, SG1002. The endothelial cell "S-sulfhydrome" consisted of 3446 individual cysteine residues in 1591 proteins. The most altered family of proteins were the integrins and focusing on beta3 integrin in detail we found that S-sulfhydration affected intraprotein disulfide bond formation and was required for the maintenance of an extended-open conformation of the beta leg. beta3 integrin S-sulfhydration was required for endothelial cell mechanotransduction in vitro as well as flow-induced dilatation in murine mesenteric arteries. In cultured cells, the loss of S-sulfhydration impaired interactions between beta3 integrin and Galpha13 (guanine nucleotide-binding protein subunit alpha 13), resulting in the constitutive activation of RhoA (ras homolog family member A) and impaired flow-induced endothelial cell realignment. In humans with atherosclerosis, endothelial function correlated with low H2Sn generation, impaired flow-induced dilatation, and failure to detect beta3 integrin S-sulfhydration, all of which were rescued after the administration of an H2Sn supplement. CONCLUSIONS: Vascular disease is associated with marked changes in the S-sulfhydration of endothelial cell proteins involved in mediating responses to flow. Short-term H2Sn supplementation improved vascular reactivity in humans highlighting the potential of interfering with this pathway to treat vascular disease.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

0 Bio Entities

0 Expression