Controversy in mechanotransduction: the role of endothelial cell-cell junctions in fluid shear stress sensing.
X S., Aitken C., Mehta V., Tardajos-Ayllon B., Serbanovic-Canic J., Zhu J., Miao B., Tzima E., Evans P., Fang Y., Schwartz MA.
Fluid shear stress (FSS) from blood flow, sensed by the vascular endothelial cells (ECs) that line all blood vessels, regulates vascular development during embryogenesis, controls adult vascular physiology and determines the location of atherosclerotic plaque formation. While a number of papers that reported a critical role for cell-cell adhesions or adhesion receptors in these processes, a recent publication challenged this paradigm, presenting evidence that ECs can very rapidly align in fluid flow as single cells without cell-cell contacts. To address this controversy, four independent laboratories assessed EC alignment in fluid flow across a range of EC cell types. These studies demonstrate a strict requirement for cell-cell contact in shear stress sensing over timescales consistent with previous literature and inconsistent with the newly published data.