4.5 Article

Extracellular histones disarrange vasoactive mediators release through a COX-NOS interaction in human endothelial cells

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR MEDICINE
Volume 21, Issue 8, Pages 1584-1592

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jcmm.13088

Keywords

extracellular histones; endothelial cells; vascular mediators; nitric oxide; prostanoids

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad
  2. Instituto de Salud Carlos III
  3. FEDER-ERDF [FIS PI10/00518, PI13/00617, RD12/0042/0052]
  4. Center for Biomedical Network Research (CIBER of Rare Diseases)
  5. INCLIVA Biomedical Research Institute
  6. Generalitat Valenciana [GV/2014/132]
  7. Grand Challenges Canada
  8. University of Valencia

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Extracellular histones are mediators of inflammation, tissue injury and organ dysfunction. Interactions between circulating histones and vascular endothelial cells are key events in histone-mediated pathologies. Our aim was to investigate the implication of extracellular histones in the production of the major vasoactive compounds released by human endothelial cells (HUVECs), prostanoids and nitric oxide (NO). HUVEC exposed to increasing concentrations of histones (0.001 to 100 mu g/ml) for 4 hrs induced prostacyclin (PGI2) production in a dose-dependent manner and decreased thromboxane A2 (TXA2) release at 100 mu g/ml. Extracellular histones raised cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) and prostacyclin synthase (PGIS) mRNA and protein expression, decreased COX-1 mRNA levels and did not change thromboxane A2 synthase (TXAS) expression. Moreover, extracellular histones decreased both, eNOS expression and NO production in HUVEC. The impaired NO production was related to COX-2 activity and superoxide production since was reversed after celecoxib (10 mu mol/l) and tempol (100 mu mol/l) treatments, respectively. In conclusion, our findings suggest that extracellular histones stimulate the release of endothelial-dependent mediators through an up-regulation in COX-2-PGIS-PGI2 pathway which involves a COX-2-dependent superoxide production that decreases the activity of eNOS and the NO production. These effects may contribute to the endothelial cell dysfunction observed in histone-mediated pathologies.

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