Single-cell RNA sequencing reveals endothelial cell transcriptome heterogeneity under homeostatic laminar flow

Z Liu, DL Ruter, K Quigley, NT Tanke… - … and Vascular Biology, 2021 - Am Heart Assoc
Z Liu, DL Ruter, K Quigley, NT Tanke, Y Jiang, VL Bautch
Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology, 2021Am Heart Assoc
Objective: Endothelial cells (ECs) that form the innermost layer of all vessels exhibit
heterogeneous cell behaviors and responses to pro-angiogenic signals that are critical for
vascular sprouting and angiogenesis. Once vessels form, remodeling and blood flow lead to
EC quiescence, and homogeneity in cell behaviors and signaling responses. These
changes are important for the function of mature vessels, but whether and at what level ECs
regulate overall expression heterogeneity during this transition is poorly understood. Here …
Objective
Endothelial cells (ECs) that form the innermost layer of all vessels exhibit heterogeneous cell behaviors and responses to pro-angiogenic signals that are critical for vascular sprouting and angiogenesis. Once vessels form, remodeling and blood flow lead to EC quiescence, and homogeneity in cell behaviors and signaling responses. These changes are important for the function of mature vessels, but whether and at what level ECs regulate overall expression heterogeneity during this transition is poorly understood. Here, we profiled EC transcriptomic heterogeneity, and expression heterogeneity of selected proteins, under homeostatic laminar flow.
Approach and Results
Single-cell RNA sequencing and fluorescence microscopy were used to characterize heterogeneity in RNA and protein gene expression levels of human ECs under homeostatic laminar flow compared to nonflow conditions. Analysis of transcriptome variance, Gini coefficient, and coefficient of variation showed that more genes increased RNA heterogeneity under laminar flow relative to genes whose expression became more homogeneous, although small subsets of cells did not follow this pattern. Analysis of a subset of genes for relative protein expression revealed little congruence between RNA and protein heterogeneity changes under flow. In contrast, the magnitude of expression level changes in RNA and protein was more coordinated among ECs in flow versus nonflow conditions.
Conclusions
ECs exposed to homeostatic laminar flow showed overall increased heterogeneity in RNA expression levels, while expression heterogeneity of selected cognate proteins did not follow RNA heterogeneity changes closely. These findings suggest that EC homeostasis is imposed post-transcriptionally in response to laminar flow.
Am Heart Assoc