Abstract
Vascular endothelial cells (ECs), forming a boundary between the circulating blood and the vessel wall, are constantly subjected to fluid shear stress due to blood flow. The aim of this study was to determine the role of the recently identified IkappaB kinases (IKKs) in shear stress activation of NF-kappaB and to elucidate the upstream signaling mechanism that mediates IKK activation. Our results demonstrate that IKKs in ECs are activated by shear stress in a rapid and transient manner. This IKK activation is followed by IkappaB degradation and NF-kappaB translocation into the nucleus. Transfection of plasmids encoding catalytic inactive mutants of IKKs, i.e. hemagglutinin (HA)-IKKalpha(K44M) and HA-IKKbeta(K44A), inhibits shear stress-induced NF-kappaB translocation. In addition, constructs encoding antisense IKKs, i.e. HA-IKKalpha(AS) and HA-IKKbeta(AS), attenuate shear stress induction of a promoter driven by the kappaB enhancer element. Preincubation of the EC monolayer with a monoclonal anti-alphavbeta3 integrin antibody (clone LM609) attenuates shear stress induction of IKK. Inhibition of tyrosine kinases by genistein causes a similar down-regulating effect. These results suggest that the integrin-mediated signaling pathway regulates NF-kappaB through IKKs in ECs in response to shear stress.
Collapse