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Increased oxidative stress and severe arterial remodeling induced by permanent high-flow challenge in experimental pulmonary hypertension

BACKGROUND: Involvement of inflammation in pulmonary hypertension (PH) has previously been demonstrated and recently, immune-modulating dendritic cells (DCs) infiltrating arterial lesions in patients suffering from idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension (IPAH) and in experimental monocrotaline-i...

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Autores principales: Dorfmüller, Peter, Chaumais, Marie-Camille, Giannakouli, Maria, Durand-Gasselin, Ingrid, Raymond, Nicolas, Fadel, Elie, Mercier, Olaf, Charlotte, Frédéric, Montani, David, Simonneau, Gérald, Humbert, Marc, Perros, Frédéric
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3189121/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21906276
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1465-9921-12-119
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author Dorfmüller, Peter
Chaumais, Marie-Camille
Giannakouli, Maria
Durand-Gasselin, Ingrid
Raymond, Nicolas
Fadel, Elie
Mercier, Olaf
Charlotte, Frédéric
Montani, David
Simonneau, Gérald
Humbert, Marc
Perros, Frédéric
author_facet Dorfmüller, Peter
Chaumais, Marie-Camille
Giannakouli, Maria
Durand-Gasselin, Ingrid
Raymond, Nicolas
Fadel, Elie
Mercier, Olaf
Charlotte, Frédéric
Montani, David
Simonneau, Gérald
Humbert, Marc
Perros, Frédéric
author_sort Dorfmüller, Peter
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Involvement of inflammation in pulmonary hypertension (PH) has previously been demonstrated and recently, immune-modulating dendritic cells (DCs) infiltrating arterial lesions in patients suffering from idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension (IPAH) and in experimental monocrotaline-induced PH have been reported. Occurrence of perivascular inflammatory cells could be linked to local increase of oxidative stress (OS), as it has been shown for systemic atherosclerosis. The impact of OS on vascular remodeling in PH is still to be determined. We hypothesized, that augmented blood-flow could increase OS and might thereby contribute to DC/inflammatory cell-recruitment and smooth-muscle-cell-proliferation. METHODS: We applied a monocrotaline-induced PH-model and combined it with permanent flow-challenge. Thirty Sprague-Dawley rats were assigned to following groups: control, monocrotaline-exposure (MCT), monocrotaline-exposure/pneumonectomy (MCT/PE). RESULTS: Hemodynamic exploration demonstrated most severe effects in MCT/PE, corresponding in histology to exuberant medial and adventitial remodeling of pulmonary muscular arteries, and intimal remodeling of smaller arterioles; lung-tissue PCR evidenced increased expression of DCs-specific fascin, CD68, proinflammatory cytokines (IL-6, RANTES, fractalkine) in MCT/PE and to a lesser extent in MCT. Major OS enzyme NOX-4 was maximal in MCT/PE. Antioxidative stress enzymes Mn-SOD and glutathion-peroxidase-1 were significantly elevated, while HO-1 showed maximal expression in MCT with significant decrease in MCT/PE. Catalase was decreased in MCT and MCT/PE. Expression of NOX-4, but also of MN-SOD in MCT/PE was mainly attributed to a highly increased number of interstitial and perivascular CXCR4/SDF1 pathway-recruited mast-cells. Stress markers malonedialdehyde and nitrotyrosine were produced in endothelial cells, medial smooth muscle and perivascular leucocytes of hypertensive vasculature. Immunolabeling for OX62, CD68 and actin revealed adventitial and medial DC- and monocyte-infiltration; in MCT/PE, medial smooth muscle cells were admixed with CD68(+)/vimentin(+ )cells. CONCLUSION: Our experimental findings support a new concept of immunologic responses to increased OS in MCT/PE-induced PAH, possibly linking recruitment of dendritic cells and OS-producing mast-cells to characteristic vasculopathy.
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spelling pubmed-31891212011-10-08 Increased oxidative stress and severe arterial remodeling induced by permanent high-flow challenge in experimental pulmonary hypertension Dorfmüller, Peter Chaumais, Marie-Camille Giannakouli, Maria Durand-Gasselin, Ingrid Raymond, Nicolas Fadel, Elie Mercier, Olaf Charlotte, Frédéric Montani, David Simonneau, Gérald Humbert, Marc Perros, Frédéric Respir Res Research BACKGROUND: Involvement of inflammation in pulmonary hypertension (PH) has previously been demonstrated and recently, immune-modulating dendritic cells (DCs) infiltrating arterial lesions in patients suffering from idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension (IPAH) and in experimental monocrotaline-induced PH have been reported. Occurrence of perivascular inflammatory cells could be linked to local increase of oxidative stress (OS), as it has been shown for systemic atherosclerosis. The impact of OS on vascular remodeling in PH is still to be determined. We hypothesized, that augmented blood-flow could increase OS and might thereby contribute to DC/inflammatory cell-recruitment and smooth-muscle-cell-proliferation. METHODS: We applied a monocrotaline-induced PH-model and combined it with permanent flow-challenge. Thirty Sprague-Dawley rats were assigned to following groups: control, monocrotaline-exposure (MCT), monocrotaline-exposure/pneumonectomy (MCT/PE). RESULTS: Hemodynamic exploration demonstrated most severe effects in MCT/PE, corresponding in histology to exuberant medial and adventitial remodeling of pulmonary muscular arteries, and intimal remodeling of smaller arterioles; lung-tissue PCR evidenced increased expression of DCs-specific fascin, CD68, proinflammatory cytokines (IL-6, RANTES, fractalkine) in MCT/PE and to a lesser extent in MCT. Major OS enzyme NOX-4 was maximal in MCT/PE. Antioxidative stress enzymes Mn-SOD and glutathion-peroxidase-1 were significantly elevated, while HO-1 showed maximal expression in MCT with significant decrease in MCT/PE. Catalase was decreased in MCT and MCT/PE. Expression of NOX-4, but also of MN-SOD in MCT/PE was mainly attributed to a highly increased number of interstitial and perivascular CXCR4/SDF1 pathway-recruited mast-cells. Stress markers malonedialdehyde and nitrotyrosine were produced in endothelial cells, medial smooth muscle and perivascular leucocytes of hypertensive vasculature. Immunolabeling for OX62, CD68 and actin revealed adventitial and medial DC- and monocyte-infiltration; in MCT/PE, medial smooth muscle cells were admixed with CD68(+)/vimentin(+ )cells. CONCLUSION: Our experimental findings support a new concept of immunologic responses to increased OS in MCT/PE-induced PAH, possibly linking recruitment of dendritic cells and OS-producing mast-cells to characteristic vasculopathy. BioMed Central 2011 2011-09-09 /pmc/articles/PMC3189121/ /pubmed/21906276 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1465-9921-12-119 Text en Copyright ©2011 Dorfmüller et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Dorfmüller, Peter
Chaumais, Marie-Camille
Giannakouli, Maria
Durand-Gasselin, Ingrid
Raymond, Nicolas
Fadel, Elie
Mercier, Olaf
Charlotte, Frédéric
Montani, David
Simonneau, Gérald
Humbert, Marc
Perros, Frédéric
Increased oxidative stress and severe arterial remodeling induced by permanent high-flow challenge in experimental pulmonary hypertension
title Increased oxidative stress and severe arterial remodeling induced by permanent high-flow challenge in experimental pulmonary hypertension
title_full Increased oxidative stress and severe arterial remodeling induced by permanent high-flow challenge in experimental pulmonary hypertension
title_fullStr Increased oxidative stress and severe arterial remodeling induced by permanent high-flow challenge in experimental pulmonary hypertension
title_full_unstemmed Increased oxidative stress and severe arterial remodeling induced by permanent high-flow challenge in experimental pulmonary hypertension
title_short Increased oxidative stress and severe arterial remodeling induced by permanent high-flow challenge in experimental pulmonary hypertension
title_sort increased oxidative stress and severe arterial remodeling induced by permanent high-flow challenge in experimental pulmonary hypertension
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3189121/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21906276
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1465-9921-12-119
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