Altered subcellular distribution of cadherin-5 in endothelial cells caused by the serum of pre-eclamptic patients.

Mol Hum Reprod

Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Ulm, Department of Biochemistry, University of Ulm, Germany.

Published: November 2000

AI Article Synopsis

  • Pre-eclampsia shows clinical features like oedema and vascular leakage, potentially linked to changes in cadherin-5, a protein that helps maintain endothelial cell contact.
  • Incubating human endothelial cells with serum from pre-eclampsia patients led to cadherin-5 accumulating in the Golgi apparatus, rather than being present at the cell membrane where it typically functions.
  • This intracellular retention of cadherin-5 may reduce adhesion complexes at the cell surface, possibly leading to endothelial dysfunction associated with pre-eclampsia.

Article Abstract

The main clinical features of pre-eclampsia are oedema and vascular leakage. Cadherin-5 mediates endothelial cell-cell contact in the vascular endothelium and may regulate permeability as a vascular function. Therefore, we addressed the question of whether pre-eclampsia alters cadherin-5 expression and intracellular distribution. Confluent human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) were incubated with 20% serum from patients with pre-eclampsia (n = 18), haemolysis-elevated liver enzymes-low platelet syndrome (HELLP) (n = 12), pregnancy-induced hypertension (PIH) (n = 18) or normal pregnancy (n = 10). After incubation with sera from patients with pre-eclampsia, immunostaining analyses showed cadherin-5 accumulation in vesicular and tubular structures of the Golgi apparatus. Immunoblot analyses of HUVEC after pre-eclampsia serum incubation showed an increase of the stable form of cadherin-5 while degradation products decreased. Degradation of cadherin-5 takes place at the cell membrane, so this decrease may be due to a decrease of cadherin-5 in the cell membrane. The accumulation of cadherin-5 in the vesicular and tubular structures of the Golgi apparatus indicates that targeting of cadherin-5 to the plasma membrane could be disrupted. We suggest that intracellular retention of cadherin-5 caused by serum factors in patients with pre-eclampsia may decrease the number of adhesion complexes in the cell membrane, thereby contributing to endothelial dysfunction.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/molehr/6.11.1027DOI Listing

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