Cell
Volume 173, Issue 3, 19 April 2018, Pages 762-775.e16
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Article
GPR68 Senses Flow and Is Essential for Vascular Physiology

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2018.03.076Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Design of a novel high-throughput assay for cellular mechanosensation

  • An RNAi screen identifies GPR68 as a mechanosensor

  • GPR68 is necessary and sufficient for responses to fluid shear stress

  • GPR68 is required for flow-induced dilation and remodeling in mice

Summary

Mechanotransduction plays a crucial role in vascular biology. One example of this is the local regulation of vascular resistance via flow-mediated dilation (FMD). Impairment of this process is a hallmark of endothelial dysfunction and a precursor to a wide array of vascular diseases, such as hypertension and atherosclerosis. Yet the molecules responsible for sensing flow (shear stress) within endothelial cells remain largely unknown. We designed a 384-well screening system that applies shear stress on cultured cells. We identified a mechanosensitive cell line that exhibits shear stress-activated calcium transients, screened a focused RNAi library, and identified GPR68 as necessary and sufficient for shear stress responses. GPR68 is expressed in endothelial cells of small-diameter (resistance) arteries. Importantly, Gpr68-deficient mice display markedly impaired acute FMD and chronic flow-mediated outward remodeling in mesenteric arterioles. Therefore, GPR68 is an essential flow sensor in arteriolar endothelium and is a critical signaling component in cardiovascular pathophysiology.

Keywords

mechanotransduction
shear stress
vasodilation
outward remodeling
GPCR
mechanosensation
vascular biology
blood flow

Cited by (0)

6

Present address: National Institute for Basic Biology, Division of Embryology, 5-1 Higashiyama, Myodaiji, Okazaki, Aichi 444-8787, Japan

7

Present address: Vertex Pharmaceuticals, 11010 Torreyana Road, San Diego, CA 92121, USA

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