12 research outputs found

    Mécanismes cellulaires et moléculaires dans la dysfonction endothéliale dans l'hypertension pulmonaire post-embolique

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    Chronic ThromboEmbolic Pulmonary Hypertension (CTEPH) is a rare and serious disease resulting from progressive mechanical obstruction of the pulmonary arteries causing a gradual increase in the mPAP (> 25 mmHg). This pathology has a surgical treatment: Pulmonary Endarterectomy. Mechanisms that involve the formation and persistence of thrombus leading to a fibrous vascular remodeling remain unknown. The pathogenesis of CTEPH is very similar to idiopathic PAH.This work has been able to demonstrate the abnormal phenotype of endothelial cells takenfrom thrombus of CTEPH and molecular anomalies in the origin of this dysfunction. Several molecular abnormalities are the cause of these functional disturbances including production and abnormal release of ICAM-1 and FGF-2. This work shows the key role of ICAM-1 protein through an autocrine loop maintains this dysfunction and the association of genotype KE disease (SNP Exon 6 E469K).This work also showed the important role of FGF-2 protein and the recruitment of endothelial progenitor cells in neovascularization observed in thrombus of CTEPH patients.L’Hypertension Pulmonaire Post-Embolique (HPPE) est une maladie rare et grave résultant d'une obstruction mécanique progressive des artères pulmonaires provoquant une augmentation progressive de la PAPm (>25 mmHg). Cette pathologie a un traitement chirurgical, l’endartériectomie pulmonaire. Bien que cette maladie ait un traitement, les mécanismes qui impliquent la formation et la persistance de thrombus conduisant à un remodelage vasculaire fibreux, restent à ce jour inconnus. La pathogénèse de l’HPPE présente de grandes similitudes avec celles de l’HTAPi.Ce travail a pu mettre en évidence le phénotype anomal de la cellule endothélialeprovenant de séquestres de patients ayant une HPPE ainsi que les anomalies moléculaires à l’origine de cette dysfonction. Plusieurs anomalies moléculaires sont à l’origine de ces perturbations fonctionnelles dont notamment une production et une libération anormale d’ICAM-1 et de FGF-2. Ce travail montre le rôle clé de la protéine ICAM-1 grâce à une boucle autocrine qui va maintenir cette dysfonction ainsi que l'association du génotype KE à la maladie (polymorphisme SNP Exon 6 E469K). Ce travail montre également le rôle essentiel que joue la protéine FGF-2 et le recrutement de progéniteurs endothéliaux dans la néo-vascularisation observée dans les thrombus de patients souffrant d’HPPE

    ICAM-1 PROMOTES THE ABNORMAL ENDOTHELIAL CELLPHENOTYPE IN CHRONIC THROMBOEMBOLIC PULMONARYHYPERTENSION

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    International audienceBACKGROUND - Pulmonary endothelial cells play a key role in the pathogenesis of ChronicThromboembolic Pulmonary Hypertension (CTEPH). Increased synthesis and/or release ofIntercellular Adhesion Molecule 1 (ICAM-1) by pulmonary endothelial cells of patients withCTEPH has been recently reported, suggesting a potential role for ICAM-1 in CTEPH.METHODS - We studied pulmonary endarterectomy specimens from 172 patients with CTEPHand pulmonary artery specimens from 97 controls undergoing lobectomy for low-stage cancerwithout metastasis.RESULTS - ICAM-1 was overexpressed in vitro in isolated and cultured endothelial cells fromendarterectomy specimens. Endothelial cell (EC) growth and apoptosis resistance weresignificantly higher in CTEPH specimens than in controls (P<0.001). Both abnormalities wereabolished by pharmacological inhibition of ICAM-1 synthesis or activity. Overexpression ofICAM-1 contributed to the acquisition and maintenance of abnormal EC growth and apoptosisresistance via phosphorylation of SRC, p38 and ERK1/2 and overproduction of Survivin.Regarding the ICAM-1 E469K polymorphism, the KE heterozygote genotype was significantlymore frequent in CTEPH than in controls, but was not associated with disease severity amongpatients with CTEPH.CONCLUSIONS - ICAM-1 contributes to maintaining the abnormal endothelial cell phenotypein CTEPH

    Unfolded Protein Response as a Compensatory Mechanism and Potential Therapeutic Target in PLN R14del Cardiomyopathy

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    BACKGROUND: Phospholamban (PLN) is a critical regulator of calcium cycling and contractility in the heart. The loss of arginine at position 14 in PLN (R14del) is associated with dilated cardiomyopathy with a high prevalence of ventricular arrhythmias. How the R14 deletion causes dilated cardiomyopathy is poorly understood, and there are no disease-specific therapies. METHODS: We used single-cell RNA sequencing to uncover PLN R14del disease mechanisms in human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSC-CMs). We used both 2-dimensional and 3-dimensional functional contractility assays to evaluate the impact of modulating disease-relevant pathways in PLN R14del hiPSC-CMs. RESULTS: Modeling of the PLN R14del cardiomyopathy with isogenic pairs of hiPSC-CMs recapitulated the contractile deficit associated with the disease in vitro. Single-cell RNA sequencing revealed the induction of the unfolded protein response (UPR) pathway in PLN R14del compared with isogenic control hiPSC-CMs. The activation of UPR was also evident in the hearts from PLN R14del patients. Silencing of each of the 3 main UPR signaling branches (IRE1, ATF6, or PERK) by siRNA exacerbated the contractile dysfunction of PLN R14del hiPSC-CMs. We explored the therapeutic potential of activating the UPR with a small molecule activator, BiP (binding immunoglobulin protein) inducer X. PLN R14del hiPSC-CMs treated with BiP protein inducer X showed a dose-dependent amelioration of the contractility deficit in both 2-dimensional cultures and 3-dimensional engineered heart tissues without affecting calcium homeostasis. CONCLUSIONS: Together, these findings suggest that the UPR exerts a protective effect in the setting of PLN R14del cardiomyopathy and that modulation of the UPR might be exploited therapeutically

    Endothelial Dysfunction in the Pathogenesis of Chronic Thromboembolic Pulmonary Hypertension : Cellular and Molecular Mechanisms

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    L’Hypertension Pulmonaire Post-Embolique (HPPE) est une maladie rare et grave résultant d'une obstruction mécanique progressive des artères pulmonaires provoquant une augmentation progressive de la PAPm (>25 mmHg). Cette pathologie a un traitement chirurgical, l’endartériectomie pulmonaire. Bien que cette maladie ait un traitement, les mécanismes qui impliquent la formation et la persistance de thrombus conduisant à un remodelage vasculaire fibreux, restent à ce jour inconnus. La pathogénèse de l’HPPE présente de grandes similitudes avec celles de l’HTAPi.Ce travail a pu mettre en évidence le phénotype anomal de la cellule endothéliale provenant de séquestres de patients ayant une HPPE ainsi que les anomalies moléculaires à l’origine de cette dysfonction. Plusieurs anomalies moléculaires sont à l’origine de ces perturbations fonctionnelles dont notamment une production et une libération anormale d’ICAM-1 et de FGF-2. Ce travail montre le rôle clé de la protéine ICAM-1 grâce à une boucle autocrine qui va maintenir cette dysfonction ainsi que l'association du génotype KE à la maladie (polymorphisme SNP Exon 6 E469K). Ce travail montre également le rôle essentiel que joue la protéine FGF-2 et le recrutement de progéniteurs endothéliaux dans la néo-vascularisation observée dans les thrombus de patients souffrant d’HPPE.Chronic ThromboEmbolic Pulmonary Hypertension (CTEPH) is a rare and serious disease resulting from progressive mechanical obstruction of the pulmonary arteries causing a gradual increase in the mPAP (> 25 mmHg). This pathology has a surgical treatment: Pulmonary Endarterectomy. Mechanisms that involve the formation and persistence of thrombus leading to a fibrous vascular remodeling remain unknown. The pathogenesis of CTEPH is very similar to idiopathic PAH.This work has been able to demonstrate the abnormal phenotype of endothelial cells taken from thrombus of CTEPH and molecular anomalies in the origin of this dysfunction. Several molecular abnormalities are the cause of these functional disturbances including production and abnormal release of ICAM-1 and FGF-2. This work shows the key role of ICAM-1 protein through an autocrine loop maintains this dysfunction and the association of genotype KE disease (SNP Exon 6 E469K).This work also showed the important role of FGF-2 protein and the recruitment of endothelial progenitor cells in neovascularization observed in thrombus of CTEPH patients

    Non-viral in vivo cytidine base editing in hepatocytes using focused ultrasound targeted microbubbles

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    CRISPR-Cas9-based genome editing technologies, such as base editing, have the potential for clinical translation, but delivering nucleic acids into target cells in vivo is a major obstacle. Viral vectors are widely used but come with safety concerns, while current non-viral methods are limited by low transfection efficiency. Here we describe a new method to deliver CRISPR-Cas9 base editing vectors to the mouse liver using focused ultrasound targeted microbubble destruction (FUTMD). We demonstrate, using the example of cytosine base editing of the Pde3b gene, that FUTMD-mediated delivery of cytosine base editing vectors can introduce stop codons (up to ∼2.5% on-target editing) in mouse liver cells in vivo. However, base editing specificity is less than one might hope with these DNA constructs. Our findings suggest that FUTMD-based gene editing tools can be rapidly and transiently deployed to specific organs and sites, providing a powerful platform for the development of non-viral genome editing therapies. Non-viral delivery also reveals greater off-target base exchange in vivo than in vitro

    Abnormal pulmonary endothelial cells may underlie the enigmatic pathogenesis of chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension

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    International audienceChronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension results from chronic mechanical obstruction of the pulmonary arteries after acute venous thromboembolism. However, the mechanisms that result in the progression from unresolved thrombus to fibrotic vascular remodeling are unknown. We hypothesized that pulmonary artery endothelial cells contribute to this phenomenon via paracrine growth factor and cytokine signaling

    Right ventricular mitochondrial respiratory function in a piglet model of chronic pulmonary hypertension

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    International audienceObjective: We aimed to assess the mitochondrial respiratory capacities in the right ventricle in the setting of ventricular remodeling induced by pressure overload.Methods: Chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension was induced in 8 piglets over a 12-week period (chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension model). Right ventricular remodeling, right ventricular function, and mitochondrial respiratory function were assessed at 3, 6, and 12 weeks after induction of pulmonary hypertension and were compared with sham animals (n = 5). Right ventricular cardiomyocytes and mitochondrial structure were studied in transmission electronic microscopy after 12 weeks.Results: As of 3 weeks, chronic pressure overload induced right ventricular dilatation, right ventricular hypertrophy, and right ventricular dysfunction. Maladaptive remodeling in the chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension model was confirmed by the decrease of right ventricular pulmonary artery coupling and right fractional area change. Mitochondrial functional assays in permeabilized right ventricular myocardial fibers revealed that oxidative phosphorylation capacities (complex I, complex II, and IV of the mitochondrial respiratory chain) were degraded. Furthermore, no change in substrate preference of mitochondria was found in the overloaded right ventricle. There was a good correlation between maximal mitochondrial oxygen consumption rate and right ventricular pulmonary artery coupling (Pearson coefficient r = 0.83). Transmission electronic microscopy analysis showed that the composition of cardiomyocytes was no different between the chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension group and the sham group. However, mitochondrial structure anomalies were significantly increased in the chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension group.Conclusions: Mitochondrial respiratory function impairment is involved early in the development of right ventricular dysfunction in a piglet model of chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension. Underlying mechanisms remain to be elucidated

    Immune biomarkers link air pollution exposure to blood pressure in adolescents

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    BACKGROUND: Childhood exposure to air pollution contributes to cardiovascular disease in adulthood. Immune and oxidative stress disturbances might mediate the effects of air pollution on the cardiovascular system, but the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood in adolescents. Therefore, we aimed to identify immune biomarkers linking air pollution exposure and blood pressure levels in adolescents. METHODS: We randomly recruited 100 adolescents (mean age, 16 years) from Fresno, California. Using central-site data, spatial-temporal modeling, and distance weighting exposures to the participant's home, we estimated average pollutant levels [particulate matter (PM), polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAH), ozone (O3), carbon monoxide (CO) and nitrogen oxides (NOx)]. We collected blood samples and vital signs on health visits. Using proteomic platforms, we quantitated markers of inflammation, oxidative stress, coagulation, and endothelial function. Immune cellular characterization was performed via mass cytometry (CyTOF). We investigated associations between pollutant levels, cytokines, immune cell types, and blood pressure (BP) using partial least squares (PLS) and linear regression, while adjusting for important confounders. RESULTS: Using PLS, biomarkers explaining most of the variance in air pollution exposure included markers of oxidative stress (GDF-15 and myeloperoxidase), acute inflammation (C-reactive protein), hemostasis (ADAMTS, D-dimer) and immune cell types such as monocytes. Most of these biomarkers were independently associated with the air pollution levels in fully adjusted regression models. In CyTOF analyses, monocytes were enriched in participants with the highest versus the lowest PM2.5 exposure. In both PLS and linear regression, diastolic BP was independently associated with PM2.5, NO, NO2, CO and PAH456 pollution levels (P ≤ 0.009). Moreover, monocyte levels were independently related to both air pollution and diastolic BP levels (P ≤ 0.010). In in vitro cell assays, plasma of participants with high PM2.5 exposure induced endothelial dysfunction as evaluated by eNOS and ICAM-1 expression and tube formation. CONCLUSIONS: For the first time in adolescents, we found that ambient air pollution levels were associated with oxidative stress, acute inflammation, altered hemostasis, endothelial dysfunction, monocyte enrichment and diastolic blood pressure. Our findings provide new insights on pollution-related immunological and cardiovascular disturbances and advocate preventative measures of air pollution exposure.status: publishe

    Autologous endothelial progenitor cell therapy improves right ventricular function in a model of chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension.

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    International audienceBACKGROUND:Right ventricular (RV) failure is the main prognostic factor in pulmonary hypertension, and ventricular capillary density (CD) has been reported to be a marker of RV maladaptive remodeling and failure. Our aim was to determine whether right intracoronary endothelial progenitor cell (EPC) infusion can improve RV function and CD in a piglet model of chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH).METHODS:We compared 3 groups: sham (n = 5), CTEPH (n = 6), and CTEPH with EPC infusion (CTEPH+EPC; n = 5). After EPC isolation from CTEPH+EPC piglet peripheral blood samples at 3 weeks, the CTEPH and sham groups underwent right intracoronary infusion of saline, and the CTEPH+EPC group received EPCs at 6 weeks. RV function, pulmonary hemodynamics, and myocardial morphometry were investigated in the animals at 10 weeks.RESULTS:After EPC administration, the RV fractional area change increased from 32.75% (interquartile range [IQR], 29.5%-36.5%) to 39% (IQR, 37.25%-46.50%; P = .030). The CTEPH+EPC piglets had reduced cardiomyocyte surface areas (from 298.3 μm2 [IQR, 277.4-335.3 μm2] to 234.6 μm2 (IQR, 211.1-264.7 μm2; P = .017), and increased CD31 expression (from 3.12 [IQR, 1.27-5.09] to 7.14 [IQR, 5.56-8.41; P = .017). EPCs were found in the RV free wall at 4 and 24 hours after injection but not 4 weeks later.CONCLUSIONS:Intracoronary infusion of EPC improved RV function and CD in a piglet model of CTEPH. This novel cell-based therapy might represent a promising RV-targeted treatment in patients with pulmonary hypertension

    Value of Neutrophil to Lymphocyte Ratio and Its Trajectory in Patients Hospitalized With Acute Heart Failure and Preserved Ejection Fraction

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    The neutrophil to lymphocyte ratio (NLR) has been proposed as a simple and routinely obtained marker of inflammation. This study sought to determine whether the NLR on admission as well as NLR trajectory would be complementary to the Get with the Guidelines Heart Failure (GWTG-HF) risk score in patients hospitalized with acute heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF).Using the Stanford Translational Research Database, we identified 443 patients between January 2002 and December 2013 hospitalized with acute HFpEF and with complete data of NLR both on admission and at discharge. The primary endpoint was all-cause mortality. Mean age was 77 ± 16 years, 58% were female, with a high prevalence of diabetes mellitus (35.4%), coronary artery disease (58.2%), systemic hypertension (96.6%) and history of atrial fibrillation (57.5%). Over a median follow-up of 2.2 years, 121 (27.3%) patients died. The median NLR on admission was 6.5 (IQR 3.6 - 11.1); a majority of patients decreased their NLR during the course of hospitalization. On multivariable Cox modeling, both NLR on admission (HR 1.18 95% CI (1.00 - .38), p = 0.04) and absolute NLR trajectory (HR 1.26 95% CI (1.10 - 1.45), p = 0.001) were shown to be incremental to GWTG-HF risk score (p < 0.05) for outcome prediction. Adding the NLR or absolute NLR trajectory to the GWTG-HF risk score significantly improved the area under the operator-receiver curve and the reclassification up to 3 years after admission.This simple, readily available marker of inflammation may be useful when stratifying the risk of patients hospitalized with HFpEF.status: publishe
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