DIKUL - logo
E-viri
Celotno besedilo
Recenzirano Odprti dostop
  • An essential role for EROS ...
    Waldeck-Weiermair, Markus; Das, Apabrita A.; Covington, Taylor A.; Yadav, Shambhu; Kaynert, Jonas; Guo, Ruby; Balendran, Priyanga; Thulabandu, Venkata Revanth; Pandey, Arvind K.; Spyropoulos, Fotios; Thomas, David C.; Michel, Thomas

    Redox biology, 07/2024, Letnik: 73
    Journal Article

    The chaperone protein EROS (“Essential for Reactive Oxygen Species”) was recently discovered in phagocytes. EROS was shown to regulate the abundance of the ROS-producing enzyme NADPH oxidase isoform 2 (NOX2) and to control ROS-mediated cell killing. Reactive oxygen species are important not only in immune surveillance, but also modulate physiological signaling responses in multiple tissues. The roles of EROS have not been previously explored in the context of oxidant-modulated cell signaling. Here we show that EROS plays a key role in ROS-dependent signal transduction in vascular endothelial cells. We used siRNA-mediated knockdown and developed CRISPR/Cas9 knockout of EROS in human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC), both of which cause a significant decrease in the abundance of NOX2 protein, associated with a marked decrease in RAC1, a small G protein that activates NOX2. Loss of EROS also attenuates receptor-mediated hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and Ca2+ signaling, disrupts cytoskeleton organization, decreases cell migration, and promotes cellular senescence. EROS knockdown blocks agonist-modulated eNOS phosphorylation and nitric oxide (NO●) generation. These effects of EROS knockdown are strikingly similar to the alterations in endothelial cell responses that we previously observed following RAC1 knockdown. Proteomic analyses following EROS or RAC1 knockdown in endothelial cells showed that reduced abundance of these two distinct proteins led to largely overlapping effects on endothelial biological processes, including oxidoreductase, protein phosphorylation, and endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) pathways. These studies demonstrate that EROS plays a central role in oxidant-modulated endothelial cell signaling by modulating NOX2 and RAC1. Display omitted •The chaperone protein EROS (“Essential for Reactive Oxygen Species”) is abundant in endothelial cells and regulates oxidant-modulated signal transduction.•EROS is required for the expression of the NADPH oxidase isoform2 (NOX2) and the small GTPase RAC1.•EROS deletion impedes cell proliferation, migration and promotes cellular senescence in human umbilical vein endothelial cells.•EROS is essential for critical oxidant signaling, posttranslational modifications and nitric oxide bioavailability.•EROS deletion disrupts the pro-oxidative NOX2/RAC1 axis, leading to cytosolic reductive stress and resulting in endothelial cell dysfunction.