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INVITED REVIEW
Vascular Medicine Research Unit, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts
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Rho GTPase; Rho-kinase; vascular endothelium; contraction; actin cytoskeleton; nitric oxide; statins
In the mammalian system, ROCKs consist of two isoforms, ROCK1 and ROCK2. ROCK1, which is also known as ROK
and p160ROCK, is located on chromosome 18 and encodes a 1,354-amino acid protein (41, 68). ROCK2, which is also known as ROK
and often referred to as Rho-kinase, is located on chromosome 12 and contains 1,388 amino acids (87). Y-27632 and fasudil are selective ROCK inhibitors that target their ATP-dependent kinase domains and therefore are equipotent in terms of inhibiting both ROCK1 and ROCK2. However, at higher concentrations, these ROCK inhibitors could also inhibit other kinases such as PKA and PKC (88). Thus current commercially available ROCK inhibitors are not entirely specific for ROCKs compared with other serine-threonine kinases in vivo and cannot distinguish between ROCK1 and ROCK2. Nevertheless, with Y-27632 and fasudil, some evidence is emerging regarding the physiological role of ROCKs, particularly in cardiovascular disease (38, 94, 100).
The emergence of ROCKs in cardiovascular disease coincides with the growing acceptance of the so-called "pleiotropic" or cholesterol-independent effects of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase inhibitors or statins. In particular, accumulating evidence indicates that endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS), which is an important mediator of endothelial function, is regulated by the RhoA/ROCK pathway (55, 58, 71, 110, 124). For example, inhibition of RhoA geranylgeranylation by statins decreases membrane GTP-bound active RhoA and subsequent ROCK activity, leading to the upregulation and activation of eNOS (58). Similarly, direct inhibition of the RhoA/ROCK pathway by ROCK inhibitors or dominant-negative mutant of RhoA has been shown to increase eNOS expression (88, 124). Because eNOS is protective of the vasculature, these studies suggest that the RhoA/ROCK pathway may play a significant pathophysiological role in various aspects of cardiovascular disease. Indeed, ROCKs are activated in patients with cardiovascular disease or its associated risk factors, suggesting that ROCK inhibition may be a useful therapeutic target in the cardiovascular system (50, 66, 79, 99).
| REGULATION OF RHOA |
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| ISOFORM AND STRUCTURE OF ROCKS |
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Recently, ROCK1-deficient (ROCK1/) and ROCK2-deficient (ROCK2/) mice have been generated (98, 111). Both mutant ROCK mice were generated by knocking in a lacZ reporter gene. In the ROCK2/ mouse, LacZ staining was observed in many locations throughout the embryo, including the dorsal root ganglions, heart, liver, and umbilical blood vessels. In the placenta, strong LacZ staining was also observed in the labyrinth layer. In the ROCK1/ mouse, LacZ staining was also detected throughout the embryo, including the aorta, dorsal root ganglia, heart, skin, and umbilical blood vessels. ROCK2/ embryos are embryonically lethal because of placental dysfunction and intrauterine growth retardation caused by thrombus formation in the labyrinth layer of the placenta. ROCK1/ mice, however, exhibit a completely different phenotype compared with ROCK2/ mice. They die postnatally because of an abnormality of filamentous actin accumulation that leads to impairment in umbilical ring closure. The ROCK1/ mice also exhibit eyes open at birth (EOB) due to disorganization of actin filaments in the epithelial cells of the eyelid. Interestingly, a substantial proportion of ROCK2/ mouse embryos exhibit EOB and omphalocele, indicating that both ROCK1 and ROCK2 may play important roles in mediating eye and umbilical ring closure. Thus further studies regarding the specific roles of ROCK1 and ROCK2 with haploinsufficient or conditional ROCK1- and ROCK2-knockout mice are needed. Recently, it was reported that haploinsufficient ROCK1-knockout mice are viable and healthy at birth and exhibit decreased cardiac fibrosis, but not hypertrophy, in response to angiotensin II infusion (90).
| REGULATION OF ROCKS |
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| DOWNSTREAM TARGETS OF ROCKS |
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), a MBS composed of a 58-kDa head and a 32-kDa tail region, and a small noncatalytic subunit, M21. ROCK2 phosphorylates MBS at Thr697, Ser854, and Thr855 (46). The functional significance of MBS phosphorylation at Ser854, however, is not known. Phosphorylation of Thr697 or Thr855 attenuates MLCP activity and, in some instances, the dissociation of MLCP from myosin (27, 119). In addition, MLC is one of the major downstream target proteins of ROCKs. ROCK2 phosphorylates Ser19 of MLC, the same residue that is phosphorylated by MLC kinase. Thus ROCK2 may increase cellular contractility via dual effects on MLC kinase and MLCP. Indeed, ROCK2 can alter the sensitivity of VSMC contraction in response to changes in Ca2+ concentration (5). ROCKs also phosphorylate ERM proteins, which serve as cross-linkers between actin filaments and membrane proteins at the cell surface. ROCK-mediated phosphorylation of ERM proteins, namely, Thr567 of ezrin, Thr564 of radixin, and Thr558 of moesin, leads to the disruption of the head-to-tail association of ERM proteins and actin cytoskeletal reorganization (69). However, it is not known whether phosphorylation of MBS on MLCP or ERM proteins is specific to ROCK isoforms. Nevertheless, ROCK1 phosphorylates LIM kinase-1 at Thr508 and LIM kinase-2 at Thr505, which inhibits cofilin-mediated actin filament disassembly by phosphorylating cofilin (64, 81, 106). Adducin, which is a membrane skeletal protein that associates with and promotes the association of spectrin with F-actin, is also a downstream target of ROCK2 (32, 48). Adducin is localized at cell-cell contact sites and is thought to participate in the assembly of the spectrin-actin network by capping the fast-growing ends of actin filaments and recruiting spectrin to the filament ends. The phosphorylation of
-adducin by ROCK2 enhances the binding activity of
-adducin to F-actin, thereby increasing the contractile response.
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| FUNCTIONS OF ROCKS |
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Stimulation of tyrosine kinase and G protein-coupled receptors recruits and activates Rho GEFs, leading to activation of RhoA, the direct upstream activator of ROCKs (37, 52). ROCKs are pivotal downstream effectors of RhoA in regulating the actin cytoskeleton. Inhibitors of ROCKs such as Y-27632 and fasudil, or overexpression of dominant-negative mutants of ROCK, cause loss of actin stress fibers and focal adhesion complexes (41, 114). This is predominantly due to the phosphorylation and inhibition of MLCP by ROCKs, which increase MLC phosphorylation and cellular contraction by facilitating interaction of myosin with F-actin. Thus ROCKs regulate cell polarity and migration through cellular contractions, protrusions, and focal adhesions. By affecting tight and adherens junctions through actin cytoskeletal contractions, ROCKs can also regulate macrophage phagocytic activity and endothelial cell permeability (122, 123).
ROCKs could regulate other cellular functions independent of their effects on the actin cytoskeleton. For example, ROCKs inhibit insulin signaling via direct phosphorylation of insulin receptor substrate-1 (IRS-1). Phosphorylation of IRS-1 uncouples the insulin receptor from phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) and potentially Glut4 activation (26). ROCKs could also regulate cell size by enhancing IGF-induced cAMP response element binding protein (CREB) phosphorylation (104), which may be the underlying mechanism by which ROCK inhibitors reduce cardiac hypertrophy (80, 83). However, a recent study in haploinsufficient ROCK1+/ mice indicates that ROCK1 is required for the development of cardiac fibrosis, not hypertrophy (90). Interestingly, ROCKs may be involved in tissue differentiation from adipocytes to myocyte. In p190-B Rho GAP-deficient mice in which the RhoA/ROCK pathway is chronically activated, there is a defect in adipogenesis, with a predilection toward myogenesis (104, 105). Treatment of p190-B Rho GAP-deficient mice with Y-27632 restores normal adipogenesis (105), suggesting that ROCKs are involved in the regulation of the myocyte differentiation.
| REGULATION OF ENOS BY ROCKS |
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1 (93) can regulate eNOS expression at the transcriptional level, eNOS expression can be also regulated at the posttranscriptional level. For example, chronic hypoxia (55), TNF-
(125), thrombin (25), oxidized LDL (61), and cellular proliferation (6, 31) are known to decrease eNOS mRNA stability. Chronic hypoxia and cellular proliferation are known to activate RhoA and ROCKs (110). In contrast, statins, which have been shown to increase eNOS mRNA stability, inhibit RhoA geranylgeranylation (58) and ROCK activity (110). Thus RhoA/ROCK inversely regulates eNOS expression through alteration in eNOS mRNA stability.
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stimulation, lead to the reduction of eNOS mRNA half-life in human endothelial cells (2, 125). Because the RhoA/ROCK pathway and the actin cytoskeleton also regulate eNOS mRNA half-life (88, 110), it is likely that cytosolic proteins, which bind to the 3'-UTR eNOS mRNA, are actin cytoskeleton-associated proteins. The RhoA/ROCK pathway may also be important in regulating eNOS activity. The activity of eNOS is dependent on intracellular Ca2+ concentration (11). There is increasing evidence that eNOS activity is also partly dependent on eNOS-interacting proteins and posttranslational modification of eNOS (11, 20). For example, eNOS activity could be regulated in part through association with caveolin-1 (35), porin (107), dynamin (12), G protein-coupled receptors (43), heat shock protein 90 (91), and various protein kinases (14, 23, 30, 34). In addition, the regulation of eNOS activity can occur via eNOS phosphorylation. The phosphorylation of Ser1177 of eNOS leads to the rapid activation of eNOS by fluid shear stress, insulin, estrogen, bradykinin, and VEGF (9, 23, 30, 47, 54). Interestingly, inhibition of RhoA or ROCKs leads to the rapid activation of PI3K/Akt and phosphorylation of eNOS (71, 124), suggesting the potential role of ROCKs in regulating eNOS activation in addition to eNOS expression. Although the phosphorylation of Ser1177 leads to increased eNOS activity, the phosphorylation of Thr495 is associated with a decrease in eNOS activity (30). In addition, although other phosphorylation sites have been identified on eNOS proteins, such as Ser114, Ser633, and other tyrosine residues, the precise functional roles of these phosphorylation sites remain to be determined (29, 108).
| ROCKS IN CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE |
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| CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS OF ROCKS |
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In conclusion, there is growing evidence that the RhoA/ROCK pathway plays an important pathophysiological role in cardiovascular diseases and that inhibition of ROCKs by ROCK inhibitors or statins may be beneficial. To date, a great number of cellular and physiological functions are mediated by ROCKs, and ROCK activity is often elevated in disorders of the cardiovascular system. Thus inhibition of ROCKs may be a potential therapeutic target in reducing cardiovascular disease. However, a greater understanding of the physiological role of each ROCK isoform in the cardiovascular system and the development of isoform-specific inhibitors are needed to resolve the specificity and safety of ROCK inhibitors.
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| FOOTNOTES |
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