AimsThe mechanisms involved in hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction (HPV) are not yet fully defined. The aim of the study was to determine the role of protein kinase C ζ (PKCζ) and neutral sphingomyelinase (nSMase) in HPV.Methods and resultsCeramide content was measured by immunocytochemistry and voltage-gated potassium channel (KV) currents were recorded by the patch clamp technique in isolated rat pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells (PASMC). Contractile responses were analysed in rat pulmonary arteries mounted in a wire myograph. Pulmonary pressure was recorded in anesthetized open-chest rats. Protein and mRNA expression were measured by western blot and RT–PCR, respectively. We found that hypoxia increased ceramide content in PASMC which was abrogated by inhibition of nSMase, but not acid sphingomyelinase (aSMase). The hypoxia-induced vasoconstrictor response in isolated pulmonary arteries and the inhibition of KV currents were strongly reduced by inhibition of PKCζ or nSMase but not aSMase. The nSMase inhibitor GW4869 prevented HPV in vivo. The vasoconstrictor response to hypoxia was mimicked by exogenous addition of bacterial Smase and ceramide. nSMase2 mRNA expression was ∼10-fold higher in pulmonary compared with mesenteric arteries. In mesenteric arteries, hypoxia failed to increase ceramide but exogenous SMase induced a contractile response.ConclusionnSMase-derived ceramide production and the activation of PKCζ are early and necessary events in the signalling cascade of acute HPV.
Recent data suggest that diabetes is a risk factor for pulmonary hypertension. The aim of the present study was to analyze whether diabetes induces endothelial dysfunction in pulmonary arteries and the mechanisms involved. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were randomly divided into a control (saline) and a diabetic group (70 mg/kg(-1) streptozotocin). After 6 wk, intrapulmonary arteries were mounted for isometric tension recording, and endothelial function was tested by the relaxant response to acetylcholine. Protein expression and localization were measured by Western blot and immunohistochemistry and superoxide production by dihydroethidium staining. Pulmonary arteries from diabetic rats showed impaired relaxant response to acetylcholine and reduced vasoconstrictor response to the nitric oxide (NO) synthase inhibitor L-NAME, whereas the response to nitroprusside and the expression of endothelial NO synthase remained unchanged. Endothelial dysfunction was reversed by addition of superoxide dismutase or the NADPH oxidase inhibitor apocynin. An increase in superoxide production and increased expression of the NADPH oxidase regulatory subunit p47(phox) were also found in pulmonary arteries from diabetic rats. In conclusion, the pulmonary circulation is a target for diabetes-induced endothelial dysfunction via enhanced NADPH oxidase-derived superoxide production.
Hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction (HPV), which aids ventilation-perfusion matching in the lungs, is triggered by mechanisms intrinsic to pulmonary arterial smooth muscles. The unique sensitivity of these muscles to hypoxia is conferred by mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit 4 isoform 2, the inhibition of which has been proposed to trigger HPV through increased generation of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species. Contrary to this model, we have shown that the LKB1–AMPK-α1 signaling pathway is critical to HPV. Spectral Doppler ultrasound revealed that deletion of the AMPK-α1 catalytic subunit blocked HPV in mice during mild (8% O2) and severe (5% O2) hypoxia, whereas AMPK-α2 deletion attenuated HPV only during severe hypoxia. By contrast, neither of these genetic manipulations affected serotonin-induced reductions in pulmonary vascular flow. HPV was also attenuated by reduced expression of LKB1, a kinase that activates AMPK during energy stress, but not after deletion of CaMKK2, a kinase that activates AMPK in response to increases in cytoplasmic Ca2+. Fluorescence imaging of acutely isolated pulmonary arterial myocytes revealed that AMPK-α1 or AMPK-α2 deletion did not affect mitochondrial membrane potential during normoxia or hypoxia. However, deletion of AMPK-α1, but not of AMPK-α2, blocked hypoxia from inhibiting KV1.5, the classical “oxygen-sensing” K+ channel in pulmonary arterial myocytes. We conclude that LKB1–AMPK-α1 signaling pathways downstream of mitochondria are critical for the induction of HPV, in a manner also supported by AMPK-α2 during severe hypoxia.
The increase in O(2) tension after birth is a major factor stimulating ductus arteriosus (DA) constriction and closure. Here we studied the role of the mitochondrial electron transport chain (ETC) as sensor, H(2)O(2) as mediator, and voltage-gated potassium (K(V)) channels and Rho kinase as effectors of O(2)-induced contraction in the chicken DA during fetal development. Switching from 0% to 21% O(2) contracted the pulmonary side of the mature DA (mature pDA) but had no effect in immature pDA and relaxed the aortic side of the mature DA (mature aDA). This contraction of the pDA was attenuated by inhibitors of the mitochondrial ETC and by the H(2)O(2) scavenger polyethylene glycol (PEG)-catalase. Moreover, O(2) increased reactive oxygen species (ROS) production, measured with the fluorescent probes dihydroethidium and 2',7'-dichlorofluorescein, only in mature pDA. The H(2)O(2) analog t-butyl-hydroperoxide mimicked the responses to O(2) in the three vessels. In contrast to immature pDA cells, mature pDA cells exhibited high-amplitude O(2)-sensitive potassium currents. The K(V) channel blocker 4-aminopyridine prevented the current inhibition elicited by O(2). The L-type Ca(2+) (Ca(L)) channel blocker nifedipine and the Rho kinase inhibitors Y-27632 and hydroxyfasudil induced a similar relaxation when mature pDA were stimulated with O(2) or H(2)O(2). Moreover, the sensitivity to these drugs increased with maturation. Our results indicate the presence of a common mechanism for O(2) sensing/signaling in mammalian and nonmammalian DA and favor the idea that, rather than a single mechanism, a parallel maturation of the sensor and effectors is critical for O(2) sensitivity appearance during development.
The molecular mechanisms underlying hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction (HPV) are not yet properly understood. Mitochondrial electron transport chain (ETC) and NADPH oxidase have been proposed as possible oxygen sensors, with derived reactive oxygen species (ROS) playing key roles in coupling the sensor(s) to the contractile machinery. We have recently reported that activation of neutral sphingomyelinase (nSMase) and protein kinase C ζ (PKCζ) participate in the signalling cascade of HPV. Herein, we studied the significance of nSMase in controlling ROS production rate in rat pulmonary artery (PA) smooth muscle cells and thereby HPV in rat PA. ROS production (analyzed by dichlorofluorescein and dihydroethidium fluorescence) was increased by hypoxia in endothelium-denuded PA segments and their inhibition prevented hypoxia-induced voltage-gated potassium channel (K(V) ) inhibition and pulmonary vasoconstriction. Consistently, H(2) O(2) , or its analogue t-BHP, decreased K(V) currents and induced a contractile response, mimicking the effects of hypoxia. Inhibitors of mitochondrial ETC (rotenone) and NADPH oxidase (apocynin) prevented hypoxia-induced ROS production, K(V) channel inhibition and vasoconstriction. Hypoxia induced p47(phox) phosphorylation and its interaction with caveolin-1. Inhibition of nSMase (GW4869) or PKCζ prevented p47(phox) phosphorylation and ROS production. The increase in ceramide induced by hypoxia (analyzed by immunocytochemistry) was inhibited by rotenone. Exogenous ceramide increased ROS production in a PKCζ sensitive manner. We propose an integrated signalling pathway for HPV which includes nSMase-PKCζ-NADPH oxidase as a necessary step required for ROS production and vasoconstriction.
Quercetin is a dietary flavonoid which exerts vasodilator, antiplatelet and antiproliferative effects and reduces blood pressure, oxidative status and end-organ damage in humans and animal models of systemic hypertension. We hypothesized that oral quercetin treatment might be protective in a rat model of pulmonary arterial hypertension. Three weeks after injection of monocrotaline, quercetin (10 mg/kg/d per os) or vehicle was administered for 10 days to adult Wistar rats. Quercetin significantly reduced mortality. In surviving animals, quercetin decreased pulmonary arterial pressure, right ventricular hypertrophy and muscularization of small pulmonary arteries. Classic biomarkers of pulmonary arterial hypertension such as the downregulated expression of lung BMPR2, Kv1.5, Kv2.1, upregulated survivin, endothelial dysfunction and hyperresponsiveness to 5-HT were unaffected by quercetin. Quercetin significantly restored the decrease in Kv currents, the upregulation of 5-HT2A receptors and reduced the Akt and S6 phosphorylation. In vitro, quercetin induced pulmonary artery vasodilator effects, inhibited pulmonary artery smooth muscle cell proliferation and induced apoptosis. In conclusion, quercetin is partially protective in this rat model of PAH. It delayed mortality by lowering PAP, RVH and vascular remodeling. Quercetin exerted effective vasodilator effects in isolated PA, inhibited cell proliferation and induced apoptosis in PASMCs. These effects were associated with decreased 5-HT2A receptor expression and Akt and S6 phosphorylation and partially restored Kv currents. Therefore, quercetin could be useful in the treatment of PAH.
Aims: A variety of vessels, such as resistance pulmonary arteries (PA) and fetoplacental arteries and the ductus arteriosus (DA) are specialized in sensing and responding to changes in oxygen tension. Despite opposite stimuli, normoxic DA contraction and hypoxic fetoplacental and PA vasoconstriction share some mechanistic features. Activation of neutral sphingomyelinase (nSMase) and subsequent ceramide production has been involved in hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction (HPV). Herein we aimed to study the possible role of nSMase-derived ceramide as a common factor in the acute oxygen-sensing function of specialized vascular tissues. Results: The nSMase inhibitor GW4869 and an anticeramide antibody reduced the hypoxic vasoconstriction in chicken PA and chorioallantoic arteries (CA) and the normoxic contraction of chicken DA. Incubation with interference RNA targeted to SMPD3 also inhibited HPV. Moreover, ceramide and reactive oxygen species production were increased by hypoxia in PA and by normoxia in DA. Either bacterial sphingomyelinase or ceramide mimicked the contractile responses of hypoxia in PA and CA and those of normoxia in the DA. Furthermore, ceramide inhibited voltage-gated potassium currents present in smooth muscle cells from PA and DA. Finally, the role of nSMase in acute oxygen sensing was also observed in human PA and DA. Innovation: These data provide evidence for the proposal that nSMasederived ceramide is a critical player in acute oxygen-sensing in specialized vascular tissues. Conclusion: Our results indicate that an increase in ceramide generation is involved in the vasoconstrictor responses induced by two opposite stimuli, such as hypoxia (in PA and CA) and normoxia (in DA). Antioxid. Redox Signal. 20, 1-14.
Key points Progression of hypoxic pulmonary hypertension is thought to be due, in part, to suppression of voltage‐gated potassium channels (Kv) in pulmonary arterial smooth muscle by hypoxia, although the precise molecular mechanisms have been unclear.AMP‐activated protein kinase (AMPK) has been proposed to couple inhibition of mitochondrial metabolism by hypoxia to acute hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction and progression of pulmonary hypertension.Inhibition of complex I of the mitochondrial electron transport chain activated AMPK and inhibited Kv1.5 channels in pulmonary arterial myocytes.AMPK activation by 5‐aminoimidazole‐4‐carboxamide riboside, A769662 or C13 attenuated Kv1.5 currents in pulmonary arterial myocytes, and this effect was non‐additive with respect to Kv1.5 inhibition by hypoxia and mitochondrial poisons.Recombinant AMPK phosphorylated recombinant human Kv1.5 channels in cell‐free assays, and inhibited K+ currents when introduced into HEK 293 cells stably expressing Kv1.5.These results suggest that AMPK is the primary mediator of reductions in Kv1.5 channels following inhibition of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation during hypoxia and by mitochondrial poisons. AbstractProgression of hypoxic pulmonary hypertension is thought to be due, in part, to suppression of voltage‐gated potassium channels (Kv) in pulmonary arterial smooth muscle cells that is mediated by the inhibition of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation. We sought to determine the role in this process of the AMP‐activated protein kinase (AMPK), which is intimately coupled to mitochondrial function due to its activation by LKB1‐dependent phosphorylation in response to increases in the cellular AMP:ATP and/or ADP:ATP ratios. Inhibition of complex I of the mitochondrial electron transport chain using phenformin activated AMPK and inhibited Kv currents in pulmonary arterial myocytes, consistent with previously reported effects of mitochondrial inhibitors. Myocyte Kv currents were also markedly inhibited upon AMPK activation by A769662, 5‐aminoimidazole‐4‐carboxamide riboside and C13 and by intracellular dialysis from a patch‐pipette of activated (thiophosphorylated) recombinant AMPK heterotrimers (α2β2γ1 or α1β1γ1). Hypoxia and inhibitors of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation reduced AMPK‐sensitive K+ currents, which were also blocked by the selective Kv1.5 channel inhibitor diphenyl phosphine oxide‐1 but unaffected by the presence of the BKCa channel blocker paxilline. Moreover, recombinant human Kv1.5 channels were phosphorylated by AMPK in cell‐free assays, and K+ currents carried by Kv1.5 stably expressed in HEK 293 cells were inhibited by intracellular dialysis of AMPK heterotrimers and by A769662, the effects of which were blocked by compound C. We conclude that AMPK mediates Kv channel inhibition by hypoxia in pulmonary arterial myocytes, at least in part, through phosphorylation of Kv1.5 and/or an associated protein.
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