Mouse liver sinusoidal endothelial cell responses to the glucocorticoid receptor agonist dexamethasone
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/35662Dato
2024-10-08Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Bhandari, Sabin; Karlstrøm, Ingelin Kyrrestad; Simon-Santamaria, Jaione; Li, Ruomei; Szafranska, Karolina Joanna; Dumitriu, Gianina Aurica; Sanchez Romano, Javier; Smedsrød, Bård Helge; Sørensen, Karen KristineSammendrag
Liver sinusoidal endothelial cells (LSECs) which make up the fenestrated wall of
the hepatic sinusoids, are active scavenger cells involved in blood waste
clearance and liver immune functions. Dexamethasone is a synthetic
glucocorticoid commonly used in the clinic and as cell culture supplement.
However, the response is dependent on tissue, cell type, and cell state. The aim of
this study was to investigate the effect of dexamethasone on primary mouse
LSECs (C57BL/6J); their viability (live-dead, LDH release, caspase 3/7 assays),
morphology (scanning electron microscopy), release of inflammatory markers
(ELISA), and scavenging functions (endocytosis assays), and associated biological
processes and pathways. We have characterized and catalogued the proteome of
LSECs cultured for 1, 10, or 48 h to elucidate time-dependent and
dexamethasone-specific cell responses. More than 6,000 protein IDs were
quantified using tandem mass tag technology and advanced mass
spectrometry (synchronous precursor selection multi-notch MS3). Enrichment
analysis showed a culture-induced upregulation of stress and inflammatory
markers, and a significant shift in cell metabolism already at 10 h, with
enhancement of glycolysis and concomitant repression of oxidative
phosphorylation. At 48 h, changes in metabolic pathways were more
pronounced with dexamethasone compared to time-matched controls.
Dexamethasone repressed the activation of inflammatory pathways (IFNgamma response, TNF-alpha signaling via NF-kB, Cell adhesion molecules),
and culture-induced release of interleukin-6, VCAM-1, and ICAM-1, and
improved cell viability partly through inhibition of apoptosis. The mouse LSECs
did not proliferate in culture. Dexamethasone treated cells showed upregulation
of xanthine dehydrogenase/oxidase (Xdh), and the transcription regulator Foxo1.
The drug further delayed but did not block the culture-induced loss of LSEC
fenestration. The LSEC capacity for endocytosis was significantly reduced at 48 h,
independent of dexamethasone, which correlated with diminished expression of
several scavenger receptors and C-type lectins and altered expression of proteins
in the endocytic machinery. The glucocorticoid receptor (NR3C1) was
suppressed by dexamethasone at 48 h, suggesting limited effect of the drug n prolonged LSEC culture. Conclusion: The study presents a detailed overview of
biological processes and pathways affected by dexamethasone in mouse LSECs
in vitro.
Forlag
Frontiers MediaSitering
Bhandari, Karlstrøm, Simon-Santamaria, Li, Szafranska, Dumitriu, Sanchez Romano, Smedsrød, Sørensen. Mouse liver sinusoidal endothelial cell responses to the glucocorticoid receptor agonist dexamethasone. Frontiers in Pharmacology. 2024;15Metadata
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