Thrombin-induced contraction in alveolar epithelial cells probed by traction microscopy


Autoria(s): Gavara i Casas, Núria; Sunyer, Raimon; Roca-Cusachs Soulere, Pere; Farré Ventura, Ramon; Rotger i Estapé, Maria del Mar; Navajas Navarro, Daniel
Contribuinte(s)

Universitat de Barcelona

Data(s)

18/05/2012

Resumo

Contractile tension of alveolar epithelial cells plays a major role in the force balance that regulates the structural integrity of the alveolar barrier. The aim of this work was to study thrombin-induced contractile forces of alveolar epithelial cells. A549 alveolar epithelial cells were challenged with thrombin, and time course of contractile forces was measured by traction microscopy. The cells exhibited basal contraction with total force magnitude 55.0 ± 12.0 nN (mean ± SE, n = 12). Traction forces were exerted predominantly at the cell periphery and pointed to the cell center. Thrombin (1 U/ml) induced a fast and sustained 2.5-fold increase in traction forces, which maintained peripheral and centripetal distribution. Actin fluorescent staining revealed F-actin polymerization and enhancement of peripheral actin rim. Disruption of actin cytoskeleton with cytochalasin D (5 µM, 30 min) and inhibition of myosin light chain kinase with ML-7 (10 µM, 30 min) and Rho kinase with Y-27632 (10 µM, 30 min) markedly depressed basal contractile tone and abolished thrombin-induced cell contraction. Therefore, the contractile response of alveolar epithelial cells to the inflammatory agonist thrombin was mediated by actin cytoskeleton remodeling and actomyosin activation through myosin light chain kinase and Rho kinase signaling pathways. Thrombin-induced contractile tension might further impair alveolar epithelial barrier integrity in the injured lung.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/2445/25854

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

The American Physiological Society

Direitos

(c) The American Physiological Society, 2006

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Palavras-Chave #Pulmó #Hidrolases #Fisiologia cel·lular #Lung #Hydrolases #Cell physiology
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article