FIGURE SUMMARY
Title

Cerebral Cavernous Malformation 1/2 complex controls ROCK1 and ROCK2 complementary functions for endothelial integrity

Authors
Lisowska, J., Rödel, C.J., Manet, S., Miroshnikova, Y.A., Boyault, C., Planus, E., De Mets, R., Lee, H.H., Destaing, O., Mertani, H., Boulday, G., Tournier-Lasserve, E., Balland, M., Abdelilah-Seyfried, S., Albiges-Rizo, C., Faurobert, E.
Source
Full text @ J. Cell Sci.

ROCK1 silencing restores normal adhesive and contractile phenotypes in CCM1-depleted HUVECs and zebrafish ccm1 mutant CCV endothelial cells. (A) Representative phase contrast images of siRNA-transfected HUVEC monolayers. (B) Representative immunofluorescence of sparsely plated siRNA-transfected HUVECs stained for F-actin (gray) and merged images with pMLC. (C) Percentage of cells with transversal actin stress fibers. Error bars, s.e.m. (n=4 except for CCM1+ROCK2 and CCM2+ROCK2 where n=2). (D) Representative immunofluorescence of F-actin (gray) and merged images with VE-cadherin of HUVEC monolayers on 20 μg/ml FN-coated coverslips at 72 h post plating. The asterisk indicates the zone of detachment for intercellular junctions. (E) Quantifications of VE-cadherin thickness from immunofluorescence staining of HUVECs presented as a percentage of control. The CT and CCM1 data are also shown in Fig. 1I. Error bars, s.e.m. (n=4 except for CCM1+ROCK1 where n=3 and CCM1+ROCK2 where n=2). In C and E, *P<0.05, **P<0.005, ***P<0.0005; NS, not significant (one-way ANOVA with Dunett's multiple comparisons). (F) Representative immunofluorescence of F-actin staining and Tg(kdrl:EGFP)-labeled endothelial cells (insets) of the CCV. (G) Quantification dot plot with s.e.m. of the intensity ratios of peripheral cortical actin over intercellular actin in WT (n=13), krit1/ccm1ty219c (16 embryos, 42 cells), krit1/ccm1ty219c+rock1-MO (16 embryos, 47 cells), and WT+rock1-MO (12 embryos, 26 cells) CCV regions; results were normalized to the WT ratio and the experiment was performed three times on independent zebrafish cohorts. ***P<0.005 (one-way ANOVA with Tukey's multiple comparisons post-test). Scale bars: 50 μm (A) 10 μm (B,D,F). CT, control.

ROCK1 silencing in ccm1 zebrafish mutant embryos rescues cardiac morphogenesis. (A–J) Endocardial cells, marked by Tg(kdrl:EGFP) (inverted images) at 48 hpf. Details with single confocal plane section of the atrioventricular canal (AVC) are shown in A′–J′. Scale bars: 30 µm (main images); 10 µm (detailed images). (K) Quantification of the number of embryos that showed a phenotypic rescue of the krit1/ccm1ty219c cardiac phenotype at 48 hpf. Embryos from krit1/ccm1ty219c/+ incrosses were 75% phenotypically WT (blue bars), while 25% showed krit1/ccm1ty219c mutant phenotype of cardiac ballooning (white bars). Embryos from krit1/ccm1ty219c/+ incrosses that were injected with high doses of rock1-MO1 and -MO2 showed a rescue of the cardiac ballooning (red), whereas embryos injected with low MO doses failed to show significant numbers with rescue. However, when combined, low doses of rock1-MO1 and -MO2 rescued the cardiac ballooning phenotype in krit1/ccm1ty219c mutant embryos as efficiently as single high dose MOs. Total numbers quantified, from a set of three independent zebrafish cohorts, are n=195 for control embryos; rock1-MO1 injected at high dose, n=232; rock1-MO2 at high dose, n=126; rock1-MO1 at low dose, n=167; rock1-MO2 at low dose, n=148; and combined rock1-MO1 and MO2 at low dose, n=134. *P<0.05 (two-way ANOVA with Dunett's multiple comparisons post-test). Embryos from krit1/ccm1ty219c/+ incrosses that were injected with either rock2a-MO1 or rock2b-MO2 did not rescue the cardiac ballooning phenotype, however, a fraction of the sibling population show MO-specific defects that are similar to the krit1/ccm1ty219c phenotype. Control for rock2a-MO, n=230; rock2a-MO, n=265; control for rock2b-MO, n=526; rock2b-MO, n=317.

Acknowledgments
This image is the copyrighted work of the attributed author or publisher, and ZFIN has permission only to display this image to its users. Additional permissions should be obtained from the applicable author or publisher of the image. Full text @ J. Cell Sci.