Nuclear SUN2 coordinates endothelial cell-matrix interactions to regulate blood vessel homeostasis and barrier function
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Vascular endothelial cells respond to environmental forces to remodel vessels during development and to achieve homeostasis, and mis-regulated responses lead to vascular dysfunction and disease. The nucleus participates in force transduction to cell-matrix junctions via the Linker of Nucleoskeleton and Cytoskeleton (LINC) complex that resides in the nuclear envelope, but how these forces are regulated and relayed is incompletely understood. We found that the LINC complex protein SUN2 is required for proper endothelial cell-matrix interactions that occur far from the nucleus and affect angiogenic expansion, vascular responses to flow, and barrier integrity. Endothelial cells lacking SUN2 had inappropriate flow responses and reduced expression of flow-mediated transcription factors in vitro and in vivo . Expression of several matrix and adhesion genes was reduced in SUN2-depleted cells, leading to defective extracellular matrix, dysmorphic focal adhesions resistant to dynamic turnover, and disturbed cell-matrix force distribution. Mechanistically, nuclear SUN2 affected dynamic regulation of the microtubule cytoskeleton that correlated with matrix metalloprotease-dependent barrier dysfunction. These findings indicate that nuclear SUN2 establishes and maintains blood vessel homeostasis by controlling microtubule-mediated effects on focal adhesion turnover and extracellular matrix properties, with implications for cardiovascular aging and diseases such as Marfan syndrome that affect vessel wall integrity.