12 research outputs found

    Cyp2c44 Gene Disruption Exacerbated Pulmonary Hypertension and Heart Failure in Female but Not Male Mice

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    Epoxyeicosatrienoicacids (EETs), synthesized from arachidonic acid by epoxygenases of the CYP2C and CYP2J gene subfamilies, contribute to hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction (HPV) in mice. Despite their roles in HPV, it is controversial whether EETs mediate or ameliorate pulmonary hypertension (PH). A recent study showed that deficiency of Cyp2j did not protect male and female mice from hypoxia-induced PH. Since CYP2C44 is a functionally important epoxygenase, we hypothesized that knockout of the Cyp2c44 gene would protect both sexes of mice from hypoxia-induced PH. We tested this hypothesis in wild-type (WT) and Cyp2c44 knockout (Cyp2c44 (-/-)) mice exposed to normoxia (room air) and hypoxia (10% O2) for 5 weeks. Exposure of WT and Cyp2c44 (-/-) mice to hypoxia resulted in pulmonary vascular remodeling, increased pulmonary artery resistance, and decreased cardiac function in both sexes. However, in female Cyp2c44 (-/-) mice, compared with WT mice, (1) pulmonary artery resistance and right ventricular hypertrophy were greater, (2) cardiac index was lower, (3) left ventricular and arterial stiffness were higher, and (4) plasma aldosterone levels were higher, but (5) there was no difference in levels of EET in lungs and heart. Paradoxically and unexpectedly, we found that Cyp2c44 disruption exacerbated hypoxia-induced PH in female but not male mice. We attribute exacerbated PH in female Cyp2c44 (-/-) mice to elevated aldosterone and as-yet-unknown systemic factors. Therefore, we suggest a role for the human CYP2C genes in protecting women from severe PH and that this could be one of the underlying causes for a better 5-year survival rate in women than in men

    The changing paradigm: estrogen receptor α recognition on DNA and within the dynamic nature of nucleosomes

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    Estrogen receptor alpha (ERα) plays a major role in the expression of estrogen-responsive genes. Although its conventional binding characteristics have been considered coincident with & exclusively in the class of steroid hormone receptors, increasing evidence challenges this paradigm. ERα was shown to bind to consensus estrogen response element half-sites (cHERE) in DNA in the presence of the ubiquitous, abundant & conserved architectural protein, high mobility group protein 1 (HMGB1). It also binds to direct repeats with various spacers, in addition to everted repeats. These in vitro binding sites have been shown to be active in vivo, with both the binding affinity and transcriptional activity increased in the presence of HMGB1. Surprisingly, ERα does not bind to the optimally oriented cERE at the dyad in rotationally phased and translationally positioned nucleosomes. However, the presence of HMGB1 restructures the nucleosome to facilitate increased ERα accessibility, resulting in sequence-specific estrogen receptor binding. The finding that HMGB1 interacts with unbound ERα provides a unique avenue for enhanced ERα activity and possibly an increase in the extent of targeting at estrogen-responsive genes. The findings are consistent with ERα 1) targeting a much wider selection of genomic response elements (half-sites and inverted, direct and everted repeats) and 2) exhibiting characteristics of both steroid and non steroid nuclear receptors. Growing evidence already shows a competition occurs at the DNA level between ERα and the non steroid nuclear hormone receptor, thyroid receptor (TR). Collectively, these reports suggest a less restrictive cataloging for estrogen receptor and a broader paradigm for understanding its role in the regulation of estrogen-responsive genes and influence on non steroid hormone receptor activities

    MicroRNAs-control of essential genes: Implications for pulmonary vascular disease

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    During normal lung development and in lung diseases structural cells in the lungs adapt to permit changes in lung function. Fibroblasts, myofibroblasts, smooth muscle, epithelial cells, and various progenitor cells can all undergo phenotypic modulation. In the pulmonary vasculature occlusive vascular lesions that occur in severe pulmonary arterial hypertension are multifocal, polyclonal lesions containing cells presumed to have undergone phenotypic transition resulting in altered proliferation, cell lifespan or contractility. Dynamic changes in gene expression and protein composition that underlie processes responsible for such cellular plasticity are not fully defined. Advances in molecular biology have shown that multiple classes of ribonucleic acid (RNA) collaborate to establish the set of proteins expressed in a cell. Both coding Messenger Ribonucleic acid (mRNA) and small noncoding RNAs (miRNA) act via multiple parallel signaling pathways to regulate transcription, mRNA processing, mRNA stability, translation and possibly protein lifespan. Rapid progress has been made in describing dynamic features of miRNA expression and miRNA function in some vascular tissues. However posttranscriptional gene silencing by microRNA-mediated mRNA degradation and translational blockade is not as well defined in the pulmonary vasculature. Recent progress in defining miRNAs that modulate vascular cell phenotypes is reviewed to illustrate both functional and therapeutic significance of small noncoding RNAs in pulmonary arterial hypertension

    Pluripotent Hematopoietic Stem Cells Augment α-Adrenergic Receptor-Mediated Contraction of Pulmonary Artery and Contribute to the Pathogenesis of Pulmonary Hypertension

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    Pulmonary hypertension (PH) is a multicellular and progressive disease with a high mortality rate. Among many cell types, hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) are incriminated in the pathogenesis of PH. However, our understanding of the mechanisms that increase HSCs in blood and lungs of hypertensive animals or patients and the role played by HSCs in the pathogenesis of PH remains elusive. Studies suggest that glycolysis is critical for the survival and growth of HSCs. In various cell types from hypertensive lungs of animals and patients, glycolysis and the glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) activity are increased. Herein, we demonstrated in mice that chronic hypoxia increased HSCs (CD34+, CD117+, CD133+, CD34+/CD117+, and CD34+/CD133+) in bone marrow and blood and around hypertensive pulmonary arteries in a time-dependent manner. Intriguingly, we found fewer CD133+ cells in the bone marrow of C57BL/6 mice compared with Sv129J mice, and C57BL mice developed less severe chronic hypoxia-elicited PH and heart failure than Sv129J mice. Similarly, the numbers of CD34+ and CD117+ cells in blood of patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) were higher (\u3e3-fold) compared with healthy individuals. By allogeneic bone marrow transplantation, we found that GFP+ bone marrow cells infiltrated the lungs and accumulated around the pulmonary arteries in lungs of hypoxic mice, and these cells contributed to increased α-adrenergic receptor-mediated contraction of the pulmonary artery cultured in hypoxia. Inhibition of G6PD activity with (3β,5α)-3,21-dihydroxypregnan-20-one, a novel and potent G6PD inhibitor, decreased HSCs in bone marrow, blood, and lungs of hypoxic mice and reduced α-agonist-induced contraction of the pulmonary artery and established hypoxia-induced PH. We did not observe CD133+ cells around the pulmonary arteries in the lungs of chronically hypoxic G6PD-deficient mice. Furthermore, knockdown of G6PD and inhibition of G6PD activity: 1) downregulated canonical and noncanonical Wnt and Fzd receptors genes; 2) upregulated Bmpr1a; 3) decreased Cxcl12, and 4) reduced HSC (CD117+ and CD133+) numbers. In all, our findings demonstrate unexpected function for bone marrow-derived HSCs in augmenting α-adrenergic receptor-mediated contraction of pulmonary arteries and remodeling of pulmonary arteries that contribute to increase pulmonary vascular resistance in PAH patients and hypoxic mice and suggest that G6PD, by regulating expression of genes in the WNT and BMPR signaling, contributed to increase and release of HSCs from the bone marrow in response to hypoxic stimuli

    Elevated 20-HETE in Metabolic Syndrome Regulates Arterial Stiffness and Systolic Hypertension via MMP12 Activation

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    Arterial stiffness plays a causal role in development of systolic hypertension. 20-hydroxyeicosatetraeonic acid (20-HETE), a cytochrome P450 (CYP450)-derived arachidonic acid metabolite, is known to be elevated in resistance arteries in hypertensive animal models and loosely associated with obesity in humans. However, the role of 20-HETE in the regulation of large artery remodeling in metabolic syndrome has not been investigated. We hypothesized that elevated 20-HETE in metabolic syndrome increases matrix metalloproteinase 12 (MMP12) activation leading to increased degradation of elastin, increased large artery stiffness and increased systolic blood pressure. 20-HETE production was increased ~7 fold in large, conduit arteries of metabolic syndrome (JCR:LA-cp, JCR) vs. normal Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats. This correlated with increased elastin degradation (~7 fold) and decreased arterial compliance (~75% JCR vs. SD). 20-HETE antagonists blocked elastin degradation in JCR rats concomitant with blocking MMP12 activation. 20-HETE antagonists normalized, and MMP12 inhibition (pharmacological and MMP12-shRNA-Lnv) significantly improved (~50% vs. untreated JCR) large artery compliance in JCR rats. 20-HETE antagonists also decreased systolic (182+/-3mmHg JCR, 145+/-3mmHg JCR+20-HETE antagonists) but not diastolic blood pressure in JCR rats. Whereas diastolic pressure was fully angiotensin II (Ang II)-dependent, systolic pressure was only partially Ang II-dependent, and large artery stiffness was Ang II-independent. Thus, 20-HETE-dependent regulation of systolic blood pressure may be a unique feature of metabolic syndrome related to high 20-HETE production in large, conduit arteries, which results in increased large artery stiffness and systolic blood pressure. These findings may have implications for management of systolic hypertension in patients with metabolic syndrome

    Hypoxic Activation of Glucose-6-phosphate Dehydrogenase Controls the Expression of Genes Involved in the Pathogenesis of Pulmonary Hypertension Through the Regulation of DNA Methylation

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    Metabolic reprogramming is considered important in the pathogenesis of the occlusive vasculopathy observed in pulmonary hypertension (PH). However, the mechanisms that link reprogrammed metabolism to aberrant expression of genes, which modulate functional phenotypes of cells in PH, remain enigmatic. Herein, we demonstrate that, in mice, hypoxia-induced PH was prevented by glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency (G6PDDef), and further show that established severe PH in Cyp2c44-/- mice was attenuated by knockdown with G6PD shRNA or by G6PD inhibition with an inhibitor (N-ethyl-N\u27-[(3β,5α)-17-oxoandrostan-3-yl]urea, NEOU). Mechanistically, G6PDDef, knockdown and inhibition in lungs: 1) reduced hypoxia-induced changes in cytoplasmic and mitochondrial metabolism, 2) increased expression of Tet methylcytosine dioxygenase 2 (Tet2) gene, and 3) upregulated expression of the coding genes and long noncoding (lnc) RNA Pint, which inhibits cell growth, by hypomethylating the promoter flanking region downstream of the transcription start site. These results suggest functional TET2 is required for G6PD inhibition to increase gene expression and to reverse hypoxia-induced PH in mice. Furthermore, the inhibitor of G6PD activity (NEOU) decreased metabolic reprogramming, upregulated TET2 and lncPINT, and inhibited growth of control and diseased smooth muscle cells isolated from pulmonary arteries of normal individuals and idiopathic-PAH patients, respectively. Collectively, these findings demonstrate a previously unrecognized function for G6PD as a regulator of DNA methylation. These findings further suggest that G6PD acts as a link between reprogrammed metabolism and aberrant gene regulation and plays a crucial role in regulating the phenotype of cells implicated in the pathogenesis of PH, a debilitating disorder with a high mortality rate
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