The RhoGEF Trio regulates the formation of tensile linear endothelial junctions to improve barrier function.

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作者:van Rijssel Jos, Sluiter Thijs J, van der Krogt Jeffrey M A, Bart Cindy I, Zhang Juan, de Vries Antoine A F, van Alphen Floris P J, Janssen Hans, van den Biggelaar Maartje, Wubbolts Richard W, Quax Paul H A, de Vries Margreet R, van Buul Jaap D
The vascular endothelium serves as a selectively permeable barrier, tightly regulating transendothelial transport of small molecules, macromolecules, and immune cells. In the context of cardiovascular and inflammatory pathologies, the integrity of this barrier is often markedly compromised, contributing to tissue dysfunction, multi-organ failure, and, ultimately, mortality. Therapeutic strategies aimed at mitigating endothelial barrier dysfunction primarily focus on enhancing the stability of endothelial cell-cell junctions. However, the precise molecular mechanisms governing junctional stability remain incompletely understood. In this study, we demonstrate that the N-terminal domain of the Rho guanine nucleotide exchange factor Trio (TrioN) enhances endothelial junctional stability by promoting the formation of tensile F-actin bundles at intercellular junctions, thereby inducing a linear junctional architecture and packaging of junctional proteins. This structural reorganization leads to an increase in endothelial barrier function. The small GTPase Rap1 is responsible for junctional tension, as depletion of Rap1 results in reduced junctional tension, loss of linearity, and increased permeability. In vivo TrioN gain-of-function experiments reveal enhanced local mechanical tension and a concomitant improvement in vascular barrier integrity within atherosclerotic vein grafts in murine models. These findings position TrioN as a promising therapeutic target for the restoration and reinforcement of endothelial barrier function in vascular disease.

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