VE-PTP maintains the endothelial barrier via plakoglobin and becomes dissociated from VE-cadherin by leukocytes and by VEGF
Open Access
- 17 November 2008
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 205 (12) , 2929-2945
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20080406
Abstract
We have shown recently that vascular endothelial protein tyrosine phosphatase (VE-PTP), an endothelial-specific membrane protein, associates with vascular endothelial (VE)–cadherin and enhances VE-cadherin function in transfected cells (Nawroth, R., G. Poell, A. Ranft, U. Samulowitz, G. Fachinger, M. Golding, D.T. Shima, U. Deutsch, and D. Vestweber. 2002. EMBO J. 21:4885–4895). We show that VE-PTP is indeed required for endothelial cell contact integrity, because down-regulation of its expression enhanced endothelial cell permeability, augmented leukocyte transmigration, and inhibited VE-cadherin–mediated adhesion. Binding of neutrophils as well as lymphocytes to endothelial cells triggered rapid (5 min) dissociation of VE-PTP from VE-cadherin. This dissociation was only seen with tumor necrosis factor α–activated, but not resting, endothelial cells. Besides leukocytes, vascular endothelial growth factor also rapidly dissociated VE-PTP from VE-cadherin, indicative of a more general role of VE-PTP in the regulation of endothelial cell contacts. Dissociation of VE-PTP and VE-cadherin in endothelial cells was accompanied by tyrosine phoshorylation of VE-cadherin, β-catenin, and plakoglobin. Surprisingly, only plakoglobin but not β-catenin was necessary for VE-PTP to support VE-cadherin adhesion in endothelial cells. In addition, inhibiting the expression of VE-PTP preferentially increased tyrosine phosphorylation of plakoglobin but not β-catenin. In conclusion, leukocytes interacting with endothelial cells rapidly dissociate VE-PTP from VE-cadherin, weakening endothelial cell contacts via a mechanism that requires plakoglobin but not β-catenin.Keywords
This publication has 61 references indexed in Scilit:
- Getting to the site of inflammation: the leukocyte adhesion cascade updatedNature Reviews Immunology, 2007
- Transcellular Diapedesis Is Initiated by Invasive PodosomesImmunity, 2007
- Vascular endothelial tyrosine phosphatase (VE-PTP)-null mice undergo vasculogenesis but die embryonically because of defects in angiogenesisProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007
- The role of JAM-A and PECAM-1 in modulating leukocyte infiltration in inflamed and ischemic tissuesJournal of Leukocyte Biology, 2006
- ESAM supports neutrophil extravasation, activation of Rho, and VEGF-induced vascular permeabilityThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2006
- Tyrosine Phosphorylation of Plakoglobin Causes Contrary Effects on Its Association with Desmosomes and Adherens Junction Components and Modulates β-Catenin-Mediated TranscriptionMolecular and Cellular Biology, 2003
- Differential movements of VE-cadherin and PECAM-1 during transmigration of polymorphonuclear leukocytes through human umbilical vein endotheliumBlood, 2002
- Functional interaction of vascular endothelial-protein-tyrosine phosphatase with the Angiopoietin receptor Tie-2Oncogene, 1999
- Neutrophils Emigrate from Venules by a Transendothelial Cell Pathway in Response to FMLPThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1998
- Functional Properties of Human Vascular Endothelial Cadherin (7B4/Cadherin-5), an Endothelium-Specific CadherinArteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology, 1995