10027/21111 W. Chen W. Chen Y. Epshtein Y. Epshtein X. Ni X. Ni R. O. Dull R. O. Dull A. E. Cress A. E. Cress J. G. N. Garcia J. G. N. Garcia J. R. Jacobson J. R. Jacobson Role of Integrin β4 in Lung Endothelial Cell Inflammatory Responses to Mechanical Stress University of Illinois at Chicago 2016 lung endothelial cell (EC) integrin β4 inflammatory 2016-08-29 00:00:00 Journal contribution https://indigo.uic.edu/articles/journal_contribution/Role_of_Integrin_4_in_Lung_Endothelial_Cell_Inflammatory_Responses_to_Mechanical_Stress/10763036 Simvastatin, an HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor, has lung vascular-protective effects that are associated with decreased agonist-induced integrin β4 (ITGB4) tyrosine phosphorylation. Accordingly, we hypothesized that endothelial cell (EC) protection by simvastatin is dependent on these effects and sought to further characterize the functional role of ITGB4 as a mediator of EC protection in the setting of excessive mechanical stretch at levels relevant to ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI). Initially, early ITGB4 tyrosine phosphorylation was confirmed in human pulmonary artery EC subjected to excessive cyclic stretch (18% CS). EC overexpression of mutant ITGB4 with specific tyrosines mutated to phenylalanine (Y1440, Y1526 Y1640, or Y1422) resulted in significantly attenuated CS-induced cytokine expression (IL6, IL-8, MCP-1, and RANTES). In addition, EC overexpression of ITGB4 constructs with specific structural deletions also resulted in significantly attenuated CS-induced inflammatory cytokine expression compared to overexpression of wildtype ITGB4. Finally, mice expressing a mutant ITGB4 lacking a cytoplasmic signaling domain were found to have attenuated lung injury after VILI-challenge (VT = 40 ml/kg, 4 h). Our results provide mechanistic insights into the anti-inflammatory properties of statins and may ultimately lead to novel strategies targeted at ITGB4 signaling to treat VILI.