The natural history of pulmonary vascular disease associated with congenital heart disease (CHD) depends on associated hemodynamics. Patients exposed to increased pulmonary blood flow (PBF) and pulmonary arterial pressure (PAP) develop pulmonary vascular disease more commonly than patients exposed to increased PBF alone. To investigate the effects of these differing mechanical forces on physiologic and molecular responses, we developed two models of CHD using fetal surgical techniques: 1) left pulmonary artery (LPA) ligation primarily resulting in increased PBF and 2) aortopulmonary shunt placement resulting in increased PBF and PAP. Hemodynamic, histologic, and molecular studies were performed on control, LPA, and shunt lambs as well as pulmonary artery endothelial cells (PAECs) derived from each. Physiologically, LPA, and to a greater extent shunt, lambs demonstrated an exaggerated increase in PAP in response to vasoconstricting stimuli compared with controls. These physiologic findings correlated with a pathologic increase in medial thickening in pulmonary arteries in shunt lambs but not in control or LPA lambs. Furthermore, in the setting of acutely increased afterload, the right ventricle of control and LPA but not shunt lambs demonstrates ventricular-vascular uncoupling and adverse ventricular-ventricular interactions. RNA sequencing revealed excellent separation between groups via both principal components analysis and unsupervised hierarchical clustering. In addition, we found hyperproliferation of PAECs from LPA lambs, and to a greater extent shunt lambs, with associated increased angiogenesis and decreased apoptosis in PAECs derived from shunt lambs. A further understanding of mechanical force-specific drivers of pulmonary artery pathology will enable development of precision therapeutics for pulmonary hypertension associated with CHD.
Lymphatic abnormalities associated with congenital heart disease are well described, yet the underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood. Using a clinically relevant ovine model of congenital heart disease with increased pulmonary blood flow, we have previously demonstrated that lymphatic endothelial cells (LECs) exposed in vivo to chronically increased pulmonary lymph flow accumulate ROS and have decreased bioavailable nitric oxide (NO). Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-γ (PPAR-γ), which abrogates production of cellular ROS by NADPH oxidase, is inhibited by Krüppel-like factor 2 (KLF2), a flow-induced transcription factor. We hypothesized that chronically increased pulmonary lymph flow induces a KLF2-mediated decrease in PPAR-γ and an accumulation of cellular ROS, contributing to decreased bioavailable NO in LECs. To better understand the mechanisms that transduce the abnormal mechanical forces associated with chronically increased pulmonary lymph flow, LECs were isolated from the efferent vessel of the caudal mediastinal lymph node of control ( n = 5) and shunt ( n = 5) lambs. KLF2 mRNA and protein were significantly increased in shunt compared with control LECs, and PPAR-γ mRNA and protein were significantly decreased. In control LECs exposed to shear forces in vitro, we found similar alterations to KLF2 and PPAR-γ expression. In shunt LECs, NADPH oxidase subunit expression was increased, and bioavailable NO was significantly lower. Transfection of shunt LECs with KLF2 siRNA normalized PPAR-γ, ROS, and bioavailable NO. Conversely, pharmacological inhibition of PPAR-γ in control LECs increased ROS equivalent to levels in shunt LECs at baseline. Taken together, these data suggest that one mechanism by which NO-mediated lymphatic function is disrupted after chronic exposure to increased pulmonary lymph flow is through altered KLF2-dependent PPAR-γ signaling, resulting in increased NADPH oxidase activity, accumulation of ROS, and decreased bioavailable NO. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Lymphatic endothelial cells, when exposed in vivo to chronically elevated pulmonary lymph flow in a model of congenital heart disease with increased pulmonary blood flow, demonstrate Krüppel-like factor 2-dependent disrupted peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-γ signaling that results in the accumulation of reactive oxygen species and decreased bioavailable nitric oxide.
Extracellular matrix deposition characterizes idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) and is orchestrated by myofibroblasts. The lung mesenchyme is an essential source of myofibroblasts in pulmonary fibrosis. While the transcription factor serum response factor (SRF) has shown to be critical in the process of myofibroblast differentiation, its role in development of pulmonary fibrosis has not been determined in vivo. In this study, we observed SRF expression localized to mesenchymal compartments, areas of dense fibrosis, and fibroblastic foci in human (IPF and normal) and bleomycin-treated mouse lungs. To determine the role of mesenchymal SRF in pulmonary fibrosis, we utilized a doxycycline inducible, Tbx4 lung enhancer (Tbx4LE) driven cre-recombinase to disrupt SRF expression in the lung mesenchyme in vivo. Doxycycline-treated Tbx4LE-rtTA/TetO-Cre/tdTom/SRFf,f (and controls) were treated with a single intratracheal dose of bleomycin to induce pulmonary fibrosis and examined for lung mesenchymal expansion, pulmonary fibrosis, and inflammatory response. Bleomycin-treated Tbx4LE-rtTA/TetO-Cre/tdTom/SRFf,f mice showed decreased numbers of Tbx4LE-positive lung mesenchymal cells (LMC) and collagen accumulation (via hydroxyproline assay) compared to controls. This effect was associated with SRF-null LMC losing their proliferative and myofibroblast differentiation potential compared to SRF-positive controls. Together, these data demonstrate that SRF plays a critical role in LMC myofibroblast expansion during bleomycin-induced pulmonary fibrosis. This sets the stage for pharmacologic strategies that specifically target SRF in the lung mesenchyme as a potential means of treating pulmonary fibrosis.
The right ventricular (RV) response to pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is heterogeneous. Most patients have maladaptive changes with RV dilation and RV failure, whereas some, especially patients with PAH secondary to congenital heart disease, have an adaptive response with hypertrophy and preserved systolic function. Mechanisms for RV adaptation to PAH are unknown, despite RV function being a primary determinant of mortality. In our congenital heart disease ovine model with fetally implanted aortopulmonary shunt (shunt lambs), we previously demonstrated an adaptive physiological RV response to increased afterload with hypertrophy. In the present study, we examined small noncoding microRNA (miRNA) expression in shunt RV and characterized downstream effects of a key miRNA. RV tissue was harvested from 4-wk-old shunt and control lambs ( n = 5), and miRNA, mRNA, and protein were quantitated. We found differential expression of 40 cardiovascular-specific miRNAs in shunt RV. Interestingly, this miRNA signature is distinct from models of RV failure, suggesting that miRNAs might contribute to adaptive RV hypertrophy. Among RV miRNAs, miR-199b was decreased in the RV with eventual downregulation of nuclear factor of activated T cells/calcineurin signaling. Furthermore, antifibrotic miR-29a was increased in the shunt RV with a reduction of the miR-29 targets collagen type A1 and type 3A1 and decreased fibrosis. Thus, we conclude that the miRNA signature specific to shunt lambs is distinct from RV failure and drives gene expression required for adaptive RV hypertrophy. We propose that the adaptive RV miRNA signature may serve as a prognostic and therapeutic tool in patients with PAH to attenuate or prevent progression of RV failure and premature death. NEW & NOTEWORTHY This study describes a novel microRNA signature of adaptive right ventricular hypertrophy, with particular attention to miR-199b and miR-29a.
The objective of this study was to characterize the litter sizes in Huanghuai goats with high prolificacy (HP, five or more kids born per litter on at least one occasion), and to compare their peripheral blood concentrations of progesterone and estradiol with those of goats with poor prolificacy (PP, up to three kids born per litter on any occasion). The circulating concentrations of progesterone and estradiol were measured by radioimmunoassay from daily blood samples taken during natural estrus cycles and at 1-5 days after ovariectomy. Estrus was synchronized using two doses of a prostaglandin analog. Litter size for the HP goats increased up to a parity of five and decreased thereafter. The percentage of goats with litter sizes of ≥4 from parities 3 to 6 ranged from 44.5% to 58.3%. Although small differences in litter size were obtained for goats of parities three, four and six relative to five, parity five does had the highest mean litter size. Progesterone concentrations began to rise earlier and were higher in the HP than in the PP goats on most days of the luteal phase, but not during the follicular phase of the cycle or after ovariectomy. There was a significant difference between the two groups (p<0.05) in the magnitude of the progesterone plateau. Mean estradiol concentrations in the HP group remained significantly higher than in the PP group (p<0.05) during the estrus cycle. There were two estradiol peaks in the HP goats during the early luteal phase, but only one in the PP group. Measurements of individual corpora lutea (CL) in vitro showed that there was a greater prevalence of small CL (<6 mm in diameter) in the HP group than in the PP group (p<0.05). After ovariectomy, the estradiol level on day 1 was significantly higher than at the nadir during the estrus cycle in both the HP (p<0.01) and PP (p<0.05) goats, while levels decreased by 12.3% and 26.2% respectively compared with the mid-luteal period in HP and PP goats (p<0.05). The overall mean estradiol concentrations in HP goats were lower than in the PP group, but no significant differences were found between groups at 1-5 days after ovariectomy.
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