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Dive into the research topics where Pingnian He is active.

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Featured researches published by Pingnian He.


Cardiovascular Research | 2010

Leucocyte/endothelium interactions and microvessel permeability: coupled or uncoupled?

Pingnian He

In response to infections or tissue injury, circulating leucocytes adhere to and migrate from the vessel lumen to interstitial inflammatory sites to combat invading pathogens. However, these defensive actions may also cause host tissue injury and microvascular dysfunction through oxidative bursts or enzyme release. For decades, the interaction between leucocytes and microvessel walls has been considered as a critical event leading to organ dysfunction. Extensive investigations have therefore focused on blocking specific adhesive ligands to prevent tissue injury. However, anti-adhesion therapies have shown limited success in preventing vascular dysfunction in clinical trials. Numerous studies have demonstrated temporal and spatial dissociations of leucocyte adhesion and/or emigration from permeability increases. The mechanisms that initiate the adhesion cascade have been found to be distinct from those that trigger the leucocyte oxidative burst responsible for increasing microvessel permeability. Recent studies demonstrated that endothelial activation by inflammatory mediators is critical for initiating platelet adhesion and platelet-dependent leucocyte recruitment resulting in augmented increases in microvessel permeability. These new developments suggest that targeting endothelial activation via directly enhancing endothelial barrier function might be a more efficient strategy than focusing on anti-adhesion or platelet/leucocyte depletion to prevent vascular damage during inflammation. Owing to space limitations and the wide range of studies in the field, this article will not serve as a comprehensive review. Instead, it will highlight the emerging evidence of adhesion-uncoupled permeability changes and establish a basis for re-evaluating the coupled relationship between leucocyte/platelet activation and microvessel permeability to achieve a better understanding of permeability regulation during inflammation.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2010

Sphingosine-1-phosphate prevents permeability increases via activation of endothelial sphingosine-1-phosphate receptor 1 in rat venules.

Gengqian Zhang; Sulei Xu; Yan Qian; Pingnian He

Sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) has been demonstrated to enhance endothelial barrier function in vivo and in vitro. However, different S1P receptor subtypes have been indicated to play different or even opposing roles in the regulation of vascular barrier function. This study aims to differentiate the roles of endogenous endothelial S1P subtype receptors in the regulation of permeability in intact microvessels using specific receptor agonist and antagonists. Microvessel permeability was measured with hydraulic conductivity (L(p)) in individually perfused rat mesenteric venules. S1P-mediated changes in endothelial intracellular Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) was measured in fura-2-loaded venules. Confocal images of fluorescent immunostaining illustrated the spatial expressions of three S1P subtype receptors (S1P(R1-3)) in rat venules. The application of S1P (1 μM) in the presence of S1P(R1-3) inhibited platelet-activating factor- or bradykinin-induced permeability increase. This S1P effect was reversed only with a selective S1P(R1) antagonist, W-146, and was not affected by S1P(R2) or S1P(R3) antagonists JTE-013 and CAY-10444, respectively. S1P(R1) was also identified as the sole receptor responsible for S1P-mediated increases in endothelial [Ca(2+)](i). S1P(R2) or S1P(R3) antagonist alone affected neither basal L(p) nor platelet-activating factor-induced permeability increase. The selective S1P(R1) agonist, SEW-2871, showed similar [Ca(2+)](i) and permeability effect to that of S1P. These results indicate that, despite the presence of S1P(R1-3) in the intact venules, only the activation of endothelial S1P(R1) is responsible for the protective action of S1P on microvessel permeability and that endogenous S1P(R2) or S1P(R3) did not exhibit functional roles in the regulation of permeability under basal or acutely stimulated conditions.


Cardiovascular Research | 2010

Endothelial [Ca2+]i and caveolin-1 antagonistically regulate eNOS activity and microvessel permeability in rat venules

Xueping Zhou; Pingnian He

AIMS In this study, we investigated the mechanisms by which caveolin-1 (CAV) inhibits increases in permeability induced by platelet activating factor (PAF) and elucidated the relationship between the endothelial intracellular Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) and CAV in regulating endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) activity and microvessel permeability in intact microvessels. METHODS AND RESULTS Experiments were conducted in individually perfused mesenteric venules in Sprague-Dawley rats. Permeability was determined by measuring hydraulic conductivity (Lp). Endothelial [Ca(2+)](i) and nitric oxide (NO) production were measured in fura-2- and DAF-2-loaded microvessels. Perfusion of the CAV scaffolding domain, AP-CAV, at 1 microM for 30 min did not affect PAF-induced increases in endothelial [Ca(2+)](i) but significantly attenuated PAF-induced NO production from 143 +/- 2 to 110 +/- 3% of control fluorescence intensity (FI). The PAF-induced Lp increase was correlatively reduced from a mean peak value of 7.5 +/- 0.9 to 1.9 +/- 0.5 times that of the control. Increasing extracellular [Ca(2+)] that potentiated PAF-induced peak [Ca(2+)](i) from 500 to 1225 nM augmented NO production to 193 +/- 13% and further increased Lp to 17.3 +/- 1.6 times the control value. More importantly, enhanced Ca(2+) influx restored the reduced NO production and Lp by AP-CAV with NO FI at 149% and Lp at 7.7 +/- 1.1 times the control value. CONCLUSION Our results indicate that eNOS inhibition and reduced NO production contribute to the inhibitory action of AP-CAV on PAF-induced increases in permeability. CAV and endothelial [Ca(2+)](i) antagonistically regulate eNOS activity in intact microvessels, and the level of produced NO is the key determinant of the degree of permeability increases during inflammation.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2011

Improved measurements of intracellular nitric oxide in intact microvessels using 4,5-diaminofluorescein diacetate

Xueping Zhou; Pingnian He

4,5-Diaminofluorescein diacetate (DAF-2 DA) has been widely used for the measurement of nitric oxide (NO) in living cells and tissues. We previously established a method that demonstrated platelet activating factor (PAF)-induced endothelial NO production in intact venules using DAF-2 DA. In previous applications, the loading dye was removed from the extracellular space before NO measurements. However, in high permeability vessels, endothelial cells quickly released the accumulated intracellular DAF-2 after the washout, which compromises the NO measurement. The objective of this study was to investigate if the presence of DAF-2 DA during NO measurements could overcome the dye retention problem and enhance the sensitivity of NO detection. Experiments were conducted in individually perfused rat venules, and endothelial NO was measured using fluorescence imaging under basal and stimulated conditions with continuous perfusion of DAF-2 DA. Continuous dye perfusion was found to promote a relatively constant endothelial dye concentration in both normal and high permeability vessels throughout the experiment. With the use of this method, the basal and stimulated NO was quantified after endothelial DAF-2 concentrations reached a steady state. Our results showed enhanced sensitivity of detecting PAF-stimulated NO compared with a previous method. We also found that the hydrolyzed intracellular DAF-2, the precursor of DAF-2 triazole, contributed significantly to the measured fluorescence and that an appropriate subtraction of non-NO-dependent intracellular DAF-2 fluorescence is critical for the assessment of NO in living tissues. This method overcame the dye leakage problem, enhanced the sensitivity of NO detection, and improved NO quantification, demonstrating significant advantages over existing methodologies using DAF-2.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2008

Three-dimensional localization and quantification of PAF-induced gap formation in intact venular microvessels.

Yanyan Jiang; Ke Wen; Xueping Zhou; Diane Schwegler-Berry; Vince Castranova; Pingnian He

Combining single-vessel perfusion technique with confocal microscopy, this study presents a new approach that allows three-dimensional visualization and quantification of endothelial gaps under experimental conditions identical to those used to measure permeability coefficients, endothelial calcium concentration, and nitric oxide production in individually perfused intact microvessels. This approach provides an efficient means for defining the transport pathways and cellular mechanisms of increased microvascular permeability during inflammation. Platelet-activating factor (PAF) was used to increase the permeability of individually perfused rat mesenteric venules. Fluorescent microspheres (FMs, 100 nm) were used as leakage markers, and confocal images were acquired at successive focal planes through the perfused microvessel. Perfusion of FMs under control conditions produced a thin, uniform layer of FMs in the vessel lumen, but in PAF-stimulated microvessels significant amounts of FMs accumulated at endothelial junctions. Reconstructed confocal images three-dimensionally delineated the temporal and spatial development of endothelial gaps in PAF-stimulated microvessels. The FM accumulation, quantified as the total fluorescence intensity per square micrometer of vessel wall, was 8.4 +/- 1.8 times the control value within 10 min of PAF perfusion and declined to 5.0 +/- 0.6 and 1.4 +/- 0.2 times the control value when FMs were applied 30 and 60 min after PAF perfusion. The changes in the magnitude of FM accumulation closely correlated with the time course of PAF-induced increases in hydraulic conductivity (L(p)), indicating that the opening and closing of endothelial gaps contributed to the transient increase in L(p) in PAF-stimulated microvessels. Electron microscopic evaluations confirmed PAF-induced gap formation and FM accumulation at endothelial clefts.


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2012

Vascular remodeling alters adhesion protein and cytoskeleton reactions to inflammatory stimuli resulting in enhanced permeability increases in rat venules.

Dong Yuan; Pingnian He

Vascular remodeling has been implicated in many inflammation-involved diseases. This study aims to investigate the microvascular remodeling-associated alterations in cell-cell adhesion and cytoskeleton reactions to inflammatory stimuli and their impact on microvessel permeability. Experiments were conducted in individually perfused rat mesenteric venules. Microvessel permeability was determined by measuring hydraulic conductivity (Lp), and endothelial intracellular calcium concentration, [Ca(2+)](i), was measured in fura-2-perfused vessels. Alterations in VE-cadherin and F-actin arrangement were examined by confocal imaging. Vascular wall cellular composition and structural changes were evaluated by electron microscopy. Vessels exposed to platelet activating factor (PAF) on day 1 were reevaluated 3 days later in rats that had undergone survival surgery. Initial PAF exposure and surgical disturbance increased microvascular wall thickness along with perivascular cell proliferation and altered F-actin arrangement. Although basal permeability was not changed, upon reexposure to PAF, peak endothelial [Ca(2+)](i) was augmented and the peak Lp was 9.3 ± 1.7 times higher than that of day 1. In contrast to patterns of PAF-induced stress fiber formation and VE-cadherin redistribution observed in day 1 vessels, the day 4 vessels at the potentiated Lp peak exhibited wide separations of VE-cadherin between endothelial cells and striking stress fibers throughout the vascular walls. Confocal images and ultrastructural micrographs also revealed that the largely separated VE-cadherin and endothelial gaps were completely covered by F-actin bundles in extended pericyte processes at the PAF-induced Lp peak. These results indicate that inflammation-induced vascular remodeling increased endothelial susceptibility to inflammatory stimuli with augmented Ca(2+) response resulting in upregulated contractility and potentiated permeability increase. Weakened adhesions between the endothelial cells and contractile mechanisms are both involved in increasing permeability in the intact microvessels and are aggravated during remodeling. The perivascular cells play important roles in stabilizing the microvessel wall, while lessening an otherwise much greater magnitude of leakage during cytoskeletal contraction.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2009

Calcium influx-dependent differential actions of superoxide and hydrogen peroxide on microvessel permeability.

Xueping Zhou; Ke Wen; Dong Yuan; Ling Ai; Pingnian He

Our previous study demonstrated that reactive oxygen species (ROS) released from activated blood cells contribute significantly to the increased microvessel permeability during inflammation. This study aims to define the individual roles of hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) and superoxide in ROS-induced increases in permeability and endothelial intracellular Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) in individually perfused rat mesenteric venules. Microvessel permeability was determined by measuring hydraulic conductivity (L(p)). Endothelial [Ca(2+)](i) was measured in fura-2 AM-loaded microvessels. Perfusing microvessels with superoxide generated by hypoxanthine and xanthine oxidase (HX/XO) induced immediate and transient increases in L(p). The mean peak value, which occurred within 5 min of HX/XO exposure, was 4.3 +/- 0.6 times that of the control. In contrast, the perfusion of H(2)O(2) (100 and 500 microM) caused no immediate increases in L(p). A significant L(p) increase, 3.6 +/- 0.6 times the control value, occurred 30 min after the perfusion of H(2)O(2) at 500 microM. The perfusion of H(2)O(2) at 100 or 500 microM for 1 h increased L(p) to 6.6 +/- 0.9 and 11.3 +/- 3.6 times the control value, respectively. The increased endothelial [Ca(2+)](i) in HX/XO or H(2)O(2) perfused vessels was correlated with the time course of the increases in L(p). Inhibiting Ca(2+) influx by LaCl(3) prevented the permeability increase induced by HX/XO or H(2)O(2). These results demonstrated differential actions of superoxide and H(2)O(2) on microvessel permeability and endothelial [Ca(2+)](i). Superoxide-induced permeability increases were immediate and transient, whereas H(2)O(2)-induced permeability increases were progressive, demonstrating concentration and time dependence. Ca(2+) influx plays an essential role in both superoxide and H(2)O(2)-induced permeability increases.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2013

Caveolin-1 scaffolding domain promotes leukocyte adhesion by reduced basal endothelial nitric oxide-mediated ICAM-1 phosphorylation in rat mesenteric venules.

Sulei Xu; Xueping Zhou; Dong Yuan; Yanchun Xu; Pingnian He

Exogenously applied caveolin-1 scaffolding domain (CAV) has been shown to inhibit inflammatory mediator-induced nitric oxide (NO) production and NO-mediated increases in microvessel permeability. However, the effect of CAV on endothelial basal NO that prevents leukocyte adhesion remains unknown. This study aims to investigate the roles of exogenously applied CAV in endothelial basal NO production, leukocyte adhesion, and adhesion-induced changes in microvessel permeability. Experiments were conducted in individually perfused rat mesenteric venules. Microvessel permeability was determined by measuring hydraulic conductivity (Lp). NO was quantified with fluorescence imaging in DAF-2-loaded vessels. Perfusing venules with CAV inhibited basal NO production without affecting basal Lp. Resuming blood flow in CAV-perfused vessels significantly increased leukocyte adhesion. The firmly adherent leukocytes altered neither basal Lp nor adherens junction integrity. Increases in Lp occurred only upon formyl-Met-Leu-Phe application that induces release of reactive oxygen species from the adherent leukocytes. The application of NO synthase inhibitor showed similar results to CAV, and NO donor abolished CAV-mediated leukocyte adhesion. Immunofluorescence staining showed increases in binding of ICAM-1 to an adhesion-blocking antibody concurrent with a Src-dependent ICAM-1 phosphorylation following CAV perfusion. Pre-perfusing vessels with anti-ICAM-1 blocking antibody or a Src kinase inhibitor attenuated CAV-induced leukocyte adhesion. These results indicate that the application of CAV, in addition to preventing excessive NO-mediated permeability increases, also causes reduction of basal NO and promotes ICAM-1-mediated leukocyte adhesion through Src activation-mediated ICAM-1 phosphorylation. CAV-induced leukocyte adhesion was uncoupled from leukocyte oxidative burst and microvessel barrier function, unless in the presence of a secondary stimulation.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2013

H2O2-induced endothelial NO production contributes to vascular cell apoptosis and increased permeability in rat venules.

Xueping Zhou; Dong Yuan; Mingxia Wang; Pingnian He

Although elevated levels of H(2)O(2) have been implicated to play important roles in the pathogenesis of various cardiovascular diseases, the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. This study aims to examine the effect of H(2)O(2) on endothelial nitric oxide (NO) production in intact venules, and elucidate the role and mechanisms of NO in H(2)O(2)-induced increases in microvessel permeability. Experiments were conducted on individually perfused rat mesenteric venules. Microvessel permeability was determined by measuring hydraulic conductivity (Lp), and endothelial [Ca(2+)](i) was measured on fura-2-loaded vessels. Perfusion of H(2)O(2) (10 μM) caused a delayed and progressively increased endothelial [Ca(2+)](i) and Lp, a pattern different from inflammatory mediator-induced immediate and transient response. Under the same experimental conditions, measuring endothelial NO via DAF-2 and the spatial detection of cell apoptosis by fluorescent markers revealed that H(2)O(2) induced two phases of NO production followed by caspase activation, intracellular Ca(2+) accumulation, and vascular cell apoptosis. The initial NO production was correlated with increased endothelial NO synthase (eNOS) Ser(1177) phosphorylation in the absence of elevated endothelial [Ca(2+)](i), whereas the second phase of NO depended on increased [Ca(2+)](i) and was associated with Thr(495) dephosphorylation without increased Ser(1177) phosphorylation. Inhibition of NOS prevented H(2)O(2)-induced caspase activation, cell apoptosis, and increases in endothelial [Ca(2+)](i) and Lp. Our results indicate that H(2)O(2) at micromolar concentration is able to induce a large magnitude of NO in intact venules, causing caspase activation-mediated endothelial Ca(2+) accumulation, cell apoptosis, and increases in permeability. The mechanisms revealed from intact microvessels may contribute to the pathogenesis of oxidant-related cardiovascular diseases.


PLOS ONE | 2015

In Vitro Recapitulation of Functional Microvessels for the Study of Endothelial Shear Response, Nitric Oxide and [Ca2+]i

Xiang Li; Sulei Xu; Pingnian He; Yuxin Liu

Microfluidic technologies enable in vitro studies to closely simulate in vivo microvessel environment with complexity. Such method overcomes certain constrains of the statically cultured endothelial monolayers and enables the cells grow under physiological range of shear flow with geometry similar to microvessels in vivo. However, there are still existing knowledge gaps and lack of convincing evidence to demonstrate and quantify key biological features of the microfluidic microvessels. In this paper, using advanced micromanufacturing and microfluidic technologies, we presented an engineered microvessel model that mimicked the dimensions and network structures of in vivo microvessels with a long-term and continuous perfusion capability, as well as high-resolution and real-time imaging capability. Through direct comparisons with studies conducted in intact microvessels, our results demonstrated that the cultured microvessels formed under perfused conditions recapitulated certain key features of the microvessels in vivo. In particular, primary human umbilical vein endothelial cells were successfully cultured the entire inner surfaces of the microchannel network with well-developed junctions indicated by VE-cadherin staining. The morphological and proliferative responses of endothelial cells to shear stresses were quantified under different flow conditions which was simulated with three-dimensional shear dependent numerical flow model. Furthermore, we successfully measured agonist-induced changes in intracellular Ca2+ concentration and nitric oxide production at individual endothelial cell levels using fluorescence imaging. The results were comparable to those derived from individually perfused intact venules. With in vivo validation of its functionalities, our microfluidic model demonstrates a great potential for biological applications and bridges the gaps between in vitro and in vivo microvascular research.

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Sulei Xu

Pennsylvania State University

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Xueping Zhou

West Virginia University

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Longkun Zhu

West Virginia University

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Dong Yuan

West Virginia University

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F. E. Curry

University of California

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M. Zeng

University of California

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Vince Castranova

National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health

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Xiang Li

Pennsylvania State University

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Diane Schwegler-Berry

National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health

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