Microfluidic analysis reveals ROCK2 regulation of endothelial cilia is essential for blood vessel lumen formation and vascular integrity
Mavria, G.; Zahed Mohajerani, S.; Grant, G.; Mccarthy, A.; Bourn, M. D.; Peyman, S. A.; Johnson, C. A.
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BackgroundThe formation of a patent vascular lumen is fundamental to circulatory function, a process governed by cytoskeletal dynamics and mechanosensory signalling. Endothelial cilia are present during blood vessel lumen development, but their precise functional role remains poorly understood. Understanding how cilia coordinate with endothelial cytoskeletal and signalling pathways is critical for elucidating mechanisms of vascular morphogenesis. MethodsWe have established a microfluidic system that recapitulates endothelial tube formation under fluid flow, enabling pharmacological and genetic manipulation with real-time visualisation of tube behaviour. Cilia, cytoskeletal dynamics, and lumen development were analysed in vitro, and in vivo. ResultsEarly perfusion in the microfluidic system induced a hierarchical vascular network. Inhibiting Rho-kinase (ROCK) or knocking down ciliary components (IFT88 and RPGRIPL1) suppressed lumen formation. ROCK inhibition or genetic ablation disrupted cilia in endothelial and non-endothelial cells, associated with LIM-kinase inhibition. Crucially, ROCK2 genetic ablation caused endothelial cilia loss, misorientation, and abrogated lumen formation, leading to haemorrhages and compromised vascular integrity in vivo. ConclusionsOur findings unveil a previously unrecognised co-regulation between cilia and ROCK signalling essential in vascular lumen formation.
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