TNIK: A redox sensor in endothelial cell permeability.

Journal: Science Advances
Published:
Abstract

Dysregulation of endothelial barrier integrity can lead to vascular leak and potentially fatal oedema. TNF-α controls endothelial permeability during inflammation and requires the actin organizing Ezrin-Radixin-Moesin (ERM) proteins. We identified TRAF2 and NCK-interacting kinase (TNIK) as a kinase directly phosphorylating and activating ERM, specifically at the plasma membrane of primary human endothelial cells. TNIK mediates TNF-α-dependent cellular stiffness and paracellular gap formation in vitro and is essential in driving inflammatory oedema formation in vivo. Unlike its homologs, TNIK activity is negatively and reversibly regulated by H2O2-mediated oxidation of C202 within the kinase domain. TNIK oxidation results in intermolecular disulfide bond formation and loss of kinase activity. Pharmacologic inhibition of endogenous reactive oxygen species production in endothelial cells elevated TNIK-dependent ERM phosphorylation, endothelial cell contraction, and cell rounding. Together, we highlight an interplay between TNIK, ERM phosphorylation, and redox signalling in regulating TNF-induced endothelial cell permeability.

Authors
Justin Joachim, Davide Maselli, Emmanouela Petsolari, Jurjan Aman, Pamela Swiatlowska, David Killock, Hiba Chaudhry, Ali Zarban, Mosharraf Sarker, Paul Fraser, Simon Cleary, Richard Amison, Isabelle Cuthbert, Yue Yang, Magda Meier, Franca Fraternali, Susan Brain, Ajay Shah, Aleksandar Ivetic