F-actin-rich contractile endothelial pores prevent vascular leakage during leukocyte diapedesis through local RhoA signalling

Open Access
Authors
  • N. Heemskerk
  • L. Schimmel
  • C. Oort
  • J. van Rijssel
  • T. Yin
  • B. Ma
  • J. van Unen
  • B. Pitter
  • S. Huveneers
  • J. Goedhart ORCID logo
  • Y. Wu
  • E. Montanez
  • A. Woodfin
  • J.D. van Buul
Publication date 27-01-2016
Journal Nature Communications
Article number 10493
Volume | Issue number 7
Number of pages 17
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Swammerdam Institute for Life Sciences (SILS)
Abstract
During immune surveillance and inflammation, leukocytes exit the vasculature through transient openings in the endothelium without causing plasma leakage. However, the exact mechanisms behind this intriguing phenomenon are still unknown. Here we report that maintenance of endothelial barrier integrity during leukocyte diapedesis requires local endothelial RhoA cycling. Endothelial RhoA depletion in vitro or Rho inhibition in vivo provokes neutrophil-induced vascular leakage that manifests during the physical movement of neutrophils through the endothelial layer. Local RhoA activation initiates the formation of contractile F-actin structures that surround emigrating neutrophils. These structures that surround neutrophil-induced endothelial pores prevent plasma leakage through actomyosin-based pore confinement. Mechanistically, we found that the initiation of RhoA activity involves ICAM-1 and the Rho GEFs Ect2 and LARG. In addition, regulation of actomyosin-based endothelial pore confinement involves ROCK2b, but not ROCK1. Thus, endothelial cells assemble RhoA-controlled contractile F-actin structures around endothelial pores that prevent vascular leakage during leukocyte extravasation.
Document type Article
Note With suppelementary information
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms10493
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F-actin-rich contractile endothelial pores (Final published version)
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