Rationale Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a lethal syndrome characterized by pulmonary vascular obstruction due in part to pulmonary artery smooth muscle cell (PASMC) hyperproliferation. Mitochondrial fragmentation and normoxic activation of hypoxia-inducible factor-1α (HIF-1α) have been observed in PAH PASMCs, however their relationship and relevance to the development of PAH is unknown. Dynamin-related protein-1 (DRP1) is a GTPase that, when activated by kinases that phosphorylate Serine-616, causes mitochondrial fission. It is however unknown whether mitochondrial fission is a prerequisite for proliferation. Objective We hypothesize that DRP1 activation is responsible for increased mitochondrial fission in PAH PASMCs and that DRP1 inhibition may slow proliferation and have therapeutic potential. Methods and Results Experiments were conducted using human control and PAH lungs (n=5) and PASMCs in culture. Parallel experiments were performed in rat lung sections and PASMCs and in rodent PAH models induced by the HIF-1α activator, cobalt, chronic hypoxia, and monocrotaline. HIF-1α activation in human PAH leads to mitochondrial fission by cyclin B1/CDK1-dependent phosphorylation of DRP1 at Serine-616. In normal PASMC, HIF-1α activation by CoCl2 or desferrioxamine causes DRP1-mediated fission. HIF-1α inhibition reduces DRP1 activation, prevents fission and reduces PASMC proliferation. Both the DRP1 inhibitor Mdivi-1 and siDRP1 prevent mitotic fission and arrest PAH PASMCs at the G2/M interphase. Mdivi-1 is antiproliferative in human PAH PASMC and in rodent models. Mdivi-1 improves exercise capacity, right ventricular function and hemodynamics in experimental PAH. Conclusion DRP-1-mediated mitotic fission is a cell cycle checkpoint that can be therapeutically targeted in hyperproliferative disorders such as PAH.
Background Right ventricular hypertrophy (RVH) and RV failure contribute to morbidity and mortality in pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). The cause of RV dysfunction and the feasibility of therapeutically targeting the RV are uncertain. We hypothesized that RV dysfunction and electrical remodeling in RVH result, in part, from a glycolytic-shift in the myocyte, caused by activation of pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase (PDK). Methods and Results We studied 2 complementary rat models: RVH+PAH (induced by monocrotaline) and RVH+without PAH (induced by pulmonary artery banding, PAB). Monocrotaline-RVH reduced RV O2-consumption and enhanced glycolysis. RV 2-fluoro-2-deoxy-glucose uptake, Glut-1 expression and pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphorylation increased in monocrotaline-RVH. The RV monophasic action potential duration and QTc-interval were prolonged due to decreased expression of repolarizing voltage-gated K+ channels (Kv1.5, Kv4.2). In the RV working-heart model, the PDK inhibitor, dichloroacetate, acutely increased glucose oxidation and cardiac work in monocrotaline-RVH. Chronic dichloroacetate therapy improved RV repolarization and RV function in vivo and in the RV Langendorff model. In PAB-induced RVH, a similar reduction in cardiac output and glycolytic shift occurred and it too improved with dichloroacetate. In PAB-RVH the benefit of dichloroacetate on cardiac output was ~1/3 that in monocrotaline-RVH. The larger effects in monocrotaline-RVH likely reflect dichloroacetate’s dual metabolic benefits in that model: regression of vascular disease and direct effects on the RV. Conclusion Reduction in RV function and electrical remodeling in 2 models of RVH relevant to human disease (PAH and pulmonic stenosis) result, in part, from a PDK-mediated glycolytic shift in the RV. PDK inhibition partially restores RV function and regresses RVH by restoring RV repolarization and enhancing glucose oxidation. Recognition that a PDK-mediated metabolic shift contributes to contractile and ionic dysfunction in RVH offers insight into the pathophysiology and treatment of RVH.
Rationale: Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a proliferative arteriopathy associated with glucose transporter-1 (Glut1) up-regulation and a glycolytic shift in lung metabolism. Glycolytic metabolism can be detected with the positron emission tomography (PET) tracer 18 F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG).Objectives: The precise cell type in which glycolytic abnormalities occur in PAH is unknown. Moreover, whether FDG-PET is sufficiently sensitive to monitor PAH progression and detect therapeutic regression is untested. We hypothesized that increased lung FDG-PET reflects enhanced glycolysis in vascular cells and is reversible in response to effective therapies. Methods: PAH was induced in Sprague-Dawley rats by monocrotaline or chronic hypoxia (10% oxygen) in combination with Sugen 5416. Monocrotaline rats were treated with oral dichloroacetate or daily imatinib injections. FDG-PET scans and pulmonary artery acceleration times were obtained weekly. The origin of the PET signal was assessed by laser capture microdissection of airway versus vascular tissue. Metabolism was measured in pulmonary artery smooth muscle cell (PASMC) cultures, using a Seahorse extracellular flux analyzer. Measurements and Main Results: Lung FDG increases 1-2 weeks after monocrotaline (when PAH is mild) and is normalized by dichloroacetate and imatinib, which both also regress medial hypertrophy. Glut1 mRNA is up-regulated in both endothelium and PASMCs, but not airway cells or macrophages. PASMCs from monocrotaline rats are hyperproliferative and display normoxic activation of hypoxia-inducible factor-1a (HIF-1a), which underlies their glycolytic phenotype. Conclusions: HIF-1a-mediated Glut1 up-regulation in proliferating vascular cells in PAH accounts for increased lung FDG-PET uptake. FDG-PET is sensitive to mild PAH and can monitor therapeutic changes in the vasculature.Keywords: hypoxia-inducible factor-1a (HIF-1a); glucose transporter-1 (Glut1); glycolysis; imatinib; Sugen 5416Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a syndrome in which the mean pulmonary artery pressure exceeds 25 mm Hg because of obstruction and constriction of precapillary pulmonary resistance arteries. An important aspect of the pathophysiology of PAH is increased proliferation and reduced apoptosis of pulmonary arterial endothelial and smooth muscle cells (PASMCs) (1-8), leading to plexiform lesions and increased muscularization, respectively.Publications describe impaired glucose oxidation and/or a shift to glycolytic metabolism in PASMCs in rodents with experimental PAH (9), in endothelial cells of patients with PAH (10, 11), and in the pulmonary arteries of rats (12) and mice (13) exposed to chronic hypoxia. Aerobic glycolysis is also known as the Warburg effect and was shown to confer a growth advantage to proliferating cells (14). A crucial determinant of whether cells generate energy through glycolysis or aerobic mitochondrial respiration is the activity of pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDH). PDH catalyzes the conversion of pyruvate into acetyl coenzyme A...
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