Piezo1 Regulates Shear-dependent Nitric Oxide Production in Human Erythrocytes
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Physiology
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Mature circulating red blood cells (RBCs) are classically viewed as passive participants in circulatory function, given erythroblasts eject their organelles during maturation. Endogenous production of nitric oxide (NO) and its effects are of particular significance; however, the integration between RBC sensation of the local environment and subsequent activation of mechano-sensitive signaling networks that generate NO remain poorly understood. The present study investigated endogenous NO production via the RBC-specific nitric oxide synthase isoform (RBC-NOS), connecting membrane strain with intracellular enzymatic processes. Isolated RBCs were obtained from apparently healthy humans. Intracellular NO was compared at rest and following shear (cellular deformation) using semiquantitative fluorescent imaging. Concurrently, RBC-NOS phosphorylation at its serine (Ser) residue was measured. The contribution of cellular deformation to shear-induced NO production in RBCs was determined by rigidifying RBCs with the thiol-oxidizing agent diamide; rigid RBCs exhibited significantly impaired (up to 80%) capacity to generate NO via RBC-NOS during shear. Standardizing membrane strain of rigid RBCs by applying increased shear did not normalize NO production, or RBC-NOS activation. Calcium imaging with fluo-4 revealed that diamide-treated RBCs exhibited a 42% impairment in Piezo1mediated calcium movement when compared with untreated RBCs. Pharmacological inhibition of Piezo1 with GsMTx4 during shear inhibited RBC-NOS activation in untreated RBCs, whereas Piezo1 activation with Yoda1 in the absence of shear stimulated RBC-NOS activation. Collectively, a novel, mechanically activated signaling pathway in mature RBCs is described. Opening of Piezo1 and subsequent influx of calcium appear to be required for endogenous production of NO in response to mechanical shear, which is accompanied by phosphorylation of RBC-NOS at Ser. The mechano-sensitive ion channel Piezo1 is expressed in enucleated red blood cells and provides a mechanism of shear-induced red cell nitric oxide production via nitric oxide synthase phosphorylation. Thiol oxidation of red cells decreases Piezo1-dependent calcium movement and thus impairs nitric oxide generation in response to mechanical force. The emerging descriptions of exclusively posttranslational signaling networks in circulating red cells as acute regulators of cell function support that these cells play an important role in cardiovascular physiology that extends beyond passive oxygen transport.
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