SUMMARY Acute intestinal inflammation involves early accumulation of neutrophils (PMN) followed by either resolution or progression to chronic inflammation. Based on recent evidence mucosal metabolism influences disease outcomes, we hypothesized that transmigrating PMN influence the transcriptional profile of the surrounding mucosa. Microarray studies revealed a cohort of hypoxia-responsive genes regulated by PMN-epithelial crosstalk. Transmigrating PMN rapidly depleted microenvironmental O2 sufficiently to stabilize intestinal epithelial cell hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF). Utilizing HIF reporter mice in an acute colitis model, we investigated the relative contribution of PMN and the respiratory burst to “inflammatory hypoxia” in vivo. CGD mice, lacking a respiratory burst, developed accentuated colitis compared to control, with exaggerated PMN infiltration and diminished inflammatory hypoxia. Finally, pharmacological HIF stabilization within the mucosa protected CGD mice from severe colitis. In conclusion, transcriptional imprinting by infiltrating neutrophils modulates the host response to inflammation, via localized O2 depletion, resulting in microenvironmental hypoxia and effective inflammatory resolution.
Rationale The vascular adventitia is a complex layer of the vessel wall consisting of vasa vasorum microvessels, nerves, fibroblasts, immune cells, and resident progenitor cells. Adventitial progenitors express the stem cell markers, Sca1 and CD34 (AdvSca1 cells), have the potential to differentiate in vitro into multiple lineages, and potentially contribute to intimal lesions in vivo. Objective While emerging data support the existence of AdvSca1 cells, the goal of this study was to determine their origin, degree of multipotency and/or heterogeneity, and contribution to vessel remodeling. Methods and Results Using two in vivo fate-mapping approaches combined with a smooth muscle cell (SMC) epigenetic lineage mark, we report that a subpopulation of AdvSca1 cells is generated in situ from differentiated SMCs. Our data establish that the vascular adventitia contains phenotypically distinct subpopulations of progenitor cells expressing SMC, myeloid, and hematopoietic progenitor-like properties and that differentiated SMCs are a source to varying degrees of each subpopulation. SMC-derived AdvSca1 cells exhibit a multipotent phenotype capable of differentiating in vivo into mature SMCs, resident macrophages, and endothelial-like cells. Following vascular injury, SMC-derived AdvSca1 cells expand in number and are major contributors to adventitial remodeling. Induction of the transcription factor Klf4 in differentiated SMCs is essential for SMC reprogramming in vivo while in vitro approaches demonstrate that Klf4 is essential for maintenance of the AdvSca1 progenitor phenotype. Conclusions We propose that generation of resident vascular progenitor cells from differentiated SMCs is a normal physiological process that contributes to the vascular stem cell pool and plays important roles in arterial homeostasis and disease.
Objective: This study was performed to assess the utility of selective small-molecule inhibitors of class I HDACs in a preclinical model of pulmonary hypertension. Methods and Results:Rats were exposed to hypobaric hypoxia for 3 weeks in the absence or presence of a benzamide HDAC inhibitor, MGCD0103, which selectively inhibits class I HDACs 1, 2, and 3. The compound reduced pulmonary arterial pressure more dramatically than tadalafil, a standard-of-care therapy for human pulmonary hypertension that functions as a vasodilator. MGCD0103 improved pulmonary artery acceleration time and reduced systolic notching of the pulmonary artery flow envelope, which suggests a positive impact of the HDAC inhibitor on pulmonary vascular remodeling and stiffening. Similar results were obtained with an independent class I HDAC-selective inhibitor, MS-275. Reduced pulmonary arterial pressure in MGCD0103-treated animals was associated with blunted pulmonary arterial wall thickening because of suppression of smooth muscle cell proliferation. Right ventricular function was maintained in MGCD0103-treated animals. Although the class I HDAC inhibitor only modestly reduced right ventricular hypertrophy, it had multiple beneficial effects on the right ventricle, which included suppression of pathological gene expression, inhibition of proapoptotic caspase activity, and repression of proinflammatory protein expression. Key Words: histone deacetylase Ⅲ pulmonary hypertension Ⅲ proliferation Ⅲ gene expression Ⅲ signaling pathways I n patients with pulmonary hypertension (PH), restricted blood flow through the pulmonary arterial circulation due to increased pulmonary vascular resistance often results in right-sided heart failure. Despite recent advances in the treatment of PH, the 5-year mortality rate for individuals with this disease still approaches 50%, which highlights an urgent need for novel therapeutics. 1 Current standards of care for patients with PH typically involve the use of vasoactive drugs, including endothelin receptor antagonists, phosphodiesterase type 5 inhibitors, and prostacyclins. More effective therapeutic strategies will likely be based on the combined use of vasodilators and agents that target distinct pathogenic mechanisms in PH, such as pulmonary vascular inflammation and fibrosis, as well as aberrant proliferation of smooth muscle cells, endothelial cells, and fibroblasts in the lung vasculature. 2 Additionally, because right ventricular (RV) failure is the cause of death in the majority of PH patients, 3,4 and it is unclear whether standards of care for left ventricular Original received October 8, 2011; revision received January 11, 2012; accepted January 18, 2012. In December 2011 HDACs control cell proliferation, inflammation, and fibrosis by catalyzing removal of acetyl groups from lysine residues in a variety of proteins. The 18 mammalian HDACs are encoded by distinct genes and are grouped into 4 classes. 6 Two broad-spectrum HDAC inhibitors are approved for the treatment of cancer. One of these compounds,...
Mass cytometry has revolutionized the study of cellular and phenotypic diversity, significantly expanding the number of phenotypic and functional characteristics that can be measured at the single-cell level. This high-dimensional analysis platform has necessitated the development of new data analysis approaches. Many of these algorithms circumvent traditional approaches used in flow cytometric analysis, fundamentally changing the way these data are analyzed and interpreted. For the beginner, however, the large number of algorithms that have been developed, as well as the lack of consensus on best practices for analyzing these data, raise multiple questions: Which algorithm is the best for analyzing a dataset? How do different algorithms compare? How can one move beyond data visualization to gain new biological insights? In this article, we describe our experiences as recent adopters of mass cytometry. By analyzing a single dataset using five cytometry by time-of-flight analysis platforms (viSNE, SPADE, X-shift, PhenoGraph, and Citrus), we identify important considerations and challenges that users should be aware of when using these different methods and common and unique insights that can be revealed by these different methods. By providing annotated workflow and figures, these analyses present a practical guide for investigators analyzing high-dimensional datasets. In total, these analyses emphasize the benefits of integrating multiple cytometry by time-of-flight analysis algorithms to gain complementary insights into these high-dimensional datasets.
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