Editorial: Understanding molecular interactions that underpin vascular mechanobiology

Cells are exposed to a variety of mechanical forces in their daily lives, especially endothelial cells that are stretched from vessel distention and are exposed to hemodynamic shear stress from a blood flow. Exposure to excessive forces can induce a disease, but the molecular details on how these ce...

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Main Authors: Adam J. Engler, Yingxiao Wang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AIP Publishing LLC 2021-09-01
Series:APL Bioengineering
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/5.0058611
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spelling doaj-e8126c5888e044e6be2dd679c044b2c52021-10-06T14:17:39ZengAIP Publishing LLCAPL Bioengineering2473-28772021-09-0153030401030401-310.1063/5.0058611Editorial: Understanding molecular interactions that underpin vascular mechanobiologyAdam J. Engler0Yingxiao Wang1Department of Bioengineering, Institute of Engineering in Medicine, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093, USADepartment of Bioengineering, Institute of Engineering in Medicine, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093, USACells are exposed to a variety of mechanical forces in their daily lives, especially endothelial cells that are stretched from vessel distention and are exposed to hemodynamic shear stress from a blood flow. Exposure to excessive forces can induce a disease, but the molecular details on how these cells perceive forces, transduce them into biochemical signals and genetic events, i.e., mechanotransduction, and integrate them into physiological or pathological changes remain unclear. However, seminal studies in endothelial cells over the past several decades have begun to elucidate some of these signals. These studies have been highlighted in APL Bioengineering and elsewhere, describing a complex temporal pattern where forces are sensed immediately by ion channels and force-dependent conformational changes in surface proteins, followed by biochemical cascades, cytoskeletal contraction, and nuclear remodeling that can affect long-term changes in endothelial morphology and fate. Key examples from the endothelial literature that have established these pathways include showing that integrins and Flk-1 or VE-cadherin act as shear stress transducers, activating downstream proteins such as Cbl and Nckβ or Src, respectively. In this Editorial, we summarize a recent literature highlighting these accomplishments, noting the engineering tools and analysis methods used in these discoveries while also highlighting unanswered questions.http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/5.0058611
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Adam J. Engler
Yingxiao Wang
spellingShingle Adam J. Engler
Yingxiao Wang
Editorial: Understanding molecular interactions that underpin vascular mechanobiology
APL Bioengineering
author_facet Adam J. Engler
Yingxiao Wang
author_sort Adam J. Engler
title Editorial: Understanding molecular interactions that underpin vascular mechanobiology
title_short Editorial: Understanding molecular interactions that underpin vascular mechanobiology
title_full Editorial: Understanding molecular interactions that underpin vascular mechanobiology
title_fullStr Editorial: Understanding molecular interactions that underpin vascular mechanobiology
title_full_unstemmed Editorial: Understanding molecular interactions that underpin vascular mechanobiology
title_sort editorial: understanding molecular interactions that underpin vascular mechanobiology
publisher AIP Publishing LLC
series APL Bioengineering
issn 2473-2877
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Cells are exposed to a variety of mechanical forces in their daily lives, especially endothelial cells that are stretched from vessel distention and are exposed to hemodynamic shear stress from a blood flow. Exposure to excessive forces can induce a disease, but the molecular details on how these cells perceive forces, transduce them into biochemical signals and genetic events, i.e., mechanotransduction, and integrate them into physiological or pathological changes remain unclear. However, seminal studies in endothelial cells over the past several decades have begun to elucidate some of these signals. These studies have been highlighted in APL Bioengineering and elsewhere, describing a complex temporal pattern where forces are sensed immediately by ion channels and force-dependent conformational changes in surface proteins, followed by biochemical cascades, cytoskeletal contraction, and nuclear remodeling that can affect long-term changes in endothelial morphology and fate. Key examples from the endothelial literature that have established these pathways include showing that integrins and Flk-1 or VE-cadherin act as shear stress transducers, activating downstream proteins such as Cbl and Nckβ or Src, respectively. In this Editorial, we summarize a recent literature highlighting these accomplishments, noting the engineering tools and analysis methods used in these discoveries while also highlighting unanswered questions.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/5.0058611
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AT yingxiaowang editorialunderstandingmolecularinteractionsthatunderpinvascularmechanobiology
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