Abstract

Due to its unique location, the endothelial surface glycocalyx (ESG) at the luminal side of the microvessel wall may serve as a mechano-sensor and transducer of blood flow and thus regulate endothelial functions. To examine this role of the ESG, we used fluorescence microscopy to measure nitric oxide (NO) production in post-capillary venules and arterioles of rat mesentery under reduced (low) and normal (high) flow conditions, with and without enzyme pretreatment to remove heparan sulfate (HS) of the ESG and in the presence of an endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) inhibitor, NG-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA). Rats (SD, 250–300g) were anesthetized. The mesentery was gently taken out from the abdominal cavity and arranged on the surface of a glass coverslip for the measurement. An individual post-capillary venule or arteriole was cannulated and loaded for 45 min with 5 μM 4, 5-Diaminofluorescein diacetate, a membrane permeable fluorescent indictor for NO, then the NO production was measured for ~10 min under a low flow (~300 μm/s) and for ~60 min under a high flow (~1000 μm/s). In the 15 min after switching to the high flow, DAF-2-NO fluorescence intensity increased to 1.27-fold of its baseline, DAF-2-NO continuously increased under the high flow, to 1.53-fold of its baseline in 60 min. Inhibition of eNOS by 1 mM L-NMMA attenuated the flow-induced NO production to 1.13-fold in 15 min and 1.30-fold of its baseline in 60 min, respectively. In contrast, no significant increase in NO production was observed after switching to the high flow for 60 min when 1 h pretreatment with 50 mU/mL heparanase III to degrade the ESG was applied. Similar NO production was observed in arterioles under low and high flows and under eNOS inhibition. Our results suggest that ESG participates in endothelial cell mechanosensing and transduction through its heparan sulfate to activate eNOS.

Highlights

  • The inner surface of blood vessels is lined with endothelial cells coated with a thin layer of endothelial surface glycocalyx (ESG)

  • The left Fig. in each panel shows the image at 10 min after low flow and the right one shows that the image at 60 min after high flow

  • The solid line with diamonds is for the control with the perfusate of 1% BSA Ringer; the dashed line with squares is for the 1 h pretreatment of heparinase III; the dotted line with crosses is for that in the presence of an endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) inhibitor, L-NMMA, and the dash-dot-dash line with triangles is for the sham control under low flow only

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Summary

Introduction

The inner surface of blood vessels is lined with endothelial cells coated with a thin layer of endothelial surface glycocalyx (ESG). The GAGs in the ESG are heparan sulfate (HS), hyaluronic acid (HA), chondroitin sulfate (CS) and sialic acid (SA), of which, the most abundant one is HS, accounting for 50–90% of the GAGs [2]. Previous studies have shown that the ESG plays an important role in maintaining vessel wall permeability [5,6,7,8] and modulating circulating blood cell-vessel wall interaction [1,9,10,11,12]. Due to its unique location, the ESG of the microvessel wall may serve as a mechano-sensor and transducer of blood flow

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