Abstract

An important physiological function of vascular endothelial cells is to detect and respond to physical stimuli. While many efforts have been made to derive endothelial cells from human embryonic stem cells (hESCs), the ability of these derivatives to respond to mechanical forces has yet to be ascertained. hESC-derived endothelial cells (hEECs) were obtained by coculturing hESCs with OP9 stromal cells. Here we applied physiologic levels of shear stress to hEECs in a parallel plate flow chamber and observed changes in cell morphology and gene expression, comparing the response to that of human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) and human microvascular endothelial cells (HMVECs). Shear induced hEECs to elongate and align in the direction of flow, and their overall transcriptional response to shear was similar to the primary cells tested. In response to shear in hEECs, COX2 and MMP1 were upregulated four- and threefold, MCP1 and VCAM1 expression decreased over fivefold, and ICAM1 and TPA were downregulated almost threefold. TGFbeta1 and SOD2 transcription exhibited no change under the conditions tested. Additionally, preshearing of hEECs mitigated TNFalpha-induced VCAM1 surface expression. These findings suggest that hEECs are capable of functionally responding to changes in fluid shear stress by modulating gene expression and cell morphology.

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