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Am J Physiol Cell Physiol 285: C1116-C1121, 2003; doi:10.1152/ajpcell.00177.2003
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VASCULAR BIOLOGY

Rho GTPase signaling modulates cell shape and contractile phenotype in an isoactin-specific manner

Alexey Y. Kolyada, Kathleen N. Riley, and Ira M. Herman

Department of Physiology, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts 02111

Submitted 2 May 2003 ; accepted in final form 27 June 2003

Rho family small GTPases (Rho, Rac, and Cdc42) play an important role in cell motility, adhesion, and cell division by signaling reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton. Here, we report an isoactin-specific, Rho GTPase-dependent signaling cascade in cells simultaneously expressing smooth muscle and nonmuscle actin isoforms. We transfected primary cultures of microvascular pericytes, cells related to vascular smooth muscle cells, with various Rho-related and Rho-specific expression plasmids. Overexpression of dominant positive Rho resulted in the formation of nonmuscle actin-containing stress fibers. At the same time, {alpha}-vascular smooth muscle actin ({alpha}VSMactin) containing stress fibers were disassembled, resulting in a dramatic reduction in cell size. Rho activation also yielded a disassembly of smooth muscle myosin and nonmuscle myosin from stress fibers. Overexpression of wild-type Rho had similar but less dramatic effects. In contrast, dominant negative Rho and C3 exotransferase or dominant positive Rac and Cdc42 expression failed to alter the actin cytoskeleton in an isoform-specific manner. The loss of smooth muscle contractile protein isoforms in pericyte stress fibers, together with a concomitant decrease in cell size, suggests that Rho activation influences "contractile" phenotype in an isoactin-specific manner. This, in turn, should yield significant alteration in microvascular remodeling during developmental and pathologic angiogenesis.

vascular smooth muscle actin; Rho GTPase; pericyte; myosin; cytoskeleton



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: I. M. Herman, Dept. of Physiology, Tufts Univ. School of Medicine, 136 Harrison Ave., Boston, MA 02111 (E-mail: ira.herman{at}tufts.edu); and A. Y. Kolyada, Dept. of Physiology, Tufts Univ. School of Medicine, 136 Harrison Ave., Boston, MA 02111 (E-mail: alexey.kolyada{at}tufts.edu).




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