Abstract

Thimet oligopeptidase (TOP, endopeptidase EC3.4.24.15) is a soluble metallopeptidase known to be expressed within the mammalian vasculature. We examine for the first time the relationship between TOP expression and laminar shear stress, a haemodynamic force associated with endothelium-mediated vascular homeostasis. Human and bovine aortic endothelial cells were exposed to physiological levels of laminar shear (0-10 dynes/cm², 24-48 h) and monitored for TOP expression using promoter activity assay, qRT-PCR, western blotting, and immunocytochemistry. Using a luciferase reporter encoding the full-length rat TOP promoter, initial studies demonstrated shear-dependent promoter activation (~five-fold). TOP mRNA and protein were also consistently up-regulated by shear, events which could be completely prevented by pre-treatment of cells with either N-acetylcysteine, superoxide dismutase, or catalase, confirming ROS involvement. Consistent with this, targeted inhibition of NADPH oxidase (apocynin, NSC23766, NOX4 siRNA) had a similar blocking effect. Finally, in view of its pivotal role in cellular antigen presentation and major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class-1 regulation, we hypothesized that the shear-dependent induction of TOP may lower MHC1 expression. In this respect, we observed that recombinant TOP over-expression in static HAECs dose-dependently depleted MHC1 (>60%), while siRNA-mediated blockade of TOP induction in sheared HAECs led to substantially elevated MHC1 (~66%). Our findings demonstrate that laminar shear positively regulates endothelial TOP expression. Moreover, a role for ROS production by NADPH oxidase is indicated. Finally, our studies suggest that shear-dependent TOP induction down-regulates MHC1 levels, pointing to a role for TOP in the flow-mediated regulation of endothelial immunogenicity.

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