Abstract

Cavins belong to a family of proteins that contribute to the formation of caveolae, which are membrane organelles with functional roles in muscle and fat. Here, we investigate the effect of cavin-3 ablation on vascular and urinary bladder structure and function. Arteries and urinary bladders from mice lacking cavin-3 (knockout: KO) and from controls (wild type: WT) were examined. Our studies revealed that the loss of cavin-3 resulted in ∼40% reduction of the caveolae protein cavin-1 in vascular and bladder smooth muscle. Electron microscopy demonstrated that the loss of cavin-3 was accompanied by a reduction of caveolae abundance by 40-45% in smooth muscle, whereas the density of caveolae in endothelial cells was unchanged. Vascular contraction in response to an α1-adrenergic agonist was normal but nitric-oxide-dependent relaxation was enhanced, in parallel with an increased relaxation on direct activation of soluble guanylyl cyclase (sGC). This was associated with an elevated expression of sGC, although blood pressure was similar in WT and KO mice. Contraction of the urinary bladder was not affected by the loss of cavin-3. The proteomic response to outlet obstruction, including STAT3 phosphorylation, the induction of synthetic markers and the repression of contractile markers were identical in WT and KO mice, the only exception being a curtailed induction of the Golgi protein GM130. Loss of cavin-3 thus reduces the number of caveolae in smooth muscle and partly destabilizes cavin-1 but the functional consequences are modest and include an elevated vascular sensitivity to nitric oxide and slightly disturbed Golgi homeostasis in situations of severe cellular stress.

Highlights

  • Many cell types, such as vascular smooth muscle cells and endothelial cells, are abundantly endowed with small plasma membrane invaginations termed caveolae

  • Knock-down of either caveolin-1 or cavin-1 typically results in reduced levels of other caveolae-associated proteins

  • Cavin3 ablation reduced the density of caveolae in smooth muscle cells by 40-45%, whereas caveolae abundance was maintained in endothelial cells

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Summary

Introduction

Many cell types, such as vascular smooth muscle cells and endothelial cells, are abundantly endowed with small plasma membrane invaginations termed caveolae. Caveolae are generated by proteins that are inserted into the inner leaflet of the cell membrane These proteins are called caveolins (Cav-1 to Cav-3) and associate with cytosolic proteins called cavins (cavin-1 to cavin-4). We sought to establish the role of cavin-3 in caveolae formation in vivo To this end, we surveyed cavin-3 expression and found it to be preferentially expressed in smooth muscle. Growth and protein expression in the urinary bladder in response to outlet obstruction, a model of distension-induced growth, were largely unchanged. These studies establish a role of cavin-3 in the formation of caveolae in vivo and show that the physiological consequences of cavin-3 ablation are modest

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