Summary
Pulmonary hypertension (PH) is a deadly vascular disease with enigmatic molecular origins. We found that vascular extracellular matrix (ECM) remodeling and stiffening are early and pervasive processes that promote PH. In multiple pulmonary vascular cell types, such ECM stiffening induced the microRNA-130/301 family via activation of co-transcription factors YAP/TAZ. MicroRNA-130/301 controlled a PPARγ-APOE-LRP8 axis, promoting collagen deposition and LOX-dependent remodeling and further up-regulating YAP/TAZ via a mechanoactive feedback loop. In turn, ECM remodeling controlled pulmonary vascular cell crosstalk via such mechanotransduction, modulation of secreted vasoactive effectors, and regulation of associated microRNA pathways. In vivo, pharmacologic inhibition of microRNA-130/301, APOE, or LOX activity ameliorated ECM remodeling and PH. Thus, ECM remodeling, as controlled by the YAP/TAZ-miR-130/301 feedback circuit, is an early PH trigger and offers combinatorial therapeutic targets for this devastating disease.
Iron–sulfur (Fe-S) clusters are essential for mitochondrial metabolism, but their regulation in pulmonary hypertension (PH) remains enigmatic. We demonstrate that alterations of the miR-210-ISCU1/2 axis cause Fe-S deficiencies in vivo and promote PH. In pulmonary vascular cells and particularly endothelium, hypoxic induction of miR-210 and repression of the miR-210 targets ISCU1/2 down-regulated Fe-S levels. In mouse and human vascular and endothelial tissue affected by PH, miR-210 was elevated accompanied by decreased ISCU1/2 and Fe-S integrity. In mice, miR-210 repressed ISCU1/2 and promoted PH. Mice deficient in miR-210, via genetic/pharmacologic means or via an endothelial-specific manner, displayed increased ISCU1/2 and were resistant to Fe-S-dependent pathophenotypes and PH. Similar to hypoxia or miR-210 overexpression, ISCU1/2 knockdown also promoted PH. Finally, cardiopulmonary exercise testing of a woman with homozygous ISCU mutations revealed exercise-induced pulmonary vascular dysfunction. Thus, driven by acquired (hypoxia) or genetic causes, the miR-210-ISCU1/2 regulatory axis is a pathogenic lynchpin causing Fe-S deficiency and PH. These findings carry broad translational implications for defining the metabolic origins of PH and potentially other metabolic diseases sharing similar underpinnings.
BackgroundVascular calcification resembles bone formation and involves vascular smooth muscle cell (SMC) transition to an osteoblast‐like phenotype to express Runx2, a master osteoblast transcription factor. One possible mechanism by which Runx2 protein expression is induced is downregulation of inhibitory microRNAs (miR).Methods and ResultsHuman coronary artery SMCs (CASMCs) treated with bone morphogenetic protein‐2 (BMP‐2; 100 ng/mL) demonstrated a 1.7‐fold (P<0.02) increase in Runx2 protein expression at 24 hours. A miR microarray and target prediction database analysis independently identified miR‐30b and miR‐30c (miR‐30b‐c) as miRs that regulate Runx2 expression. Real‐time–polymerase chain reaction confirmed that BMP‐2 decreased miR‐30b and miR‐30c expression. A luciferase reporter assay verified that both miR‐30b and miR‐30c bind to the 3′‐untranslated region of Runx2 mRNA to regulate its expression. CASMCs transfected with antagomirs to downregulate miR‐30b‐c demonstrated significantly increased Runx2, intracellular calcium deposition, and mineralization. Conversely, forced expression of miR‐30b‐c by transfection with pre–miR‐30b‐c prevented the increase in Runx2 expression and mineralization of SMCs. Calcified human coronary arteries demonstrated higher levels of BMP‐2 and lower levels of miR‐30b than did noncalcified donor coronary arteries.ConclusionsBMP‐2 downregulates miR‐30b and miR‐30c to increase Runx2 expression in CASMCs and promote mineralization. Strategies that modulate expression of miR‐30b and miR‐30c may influence vascular calcification.
Background:The microRNA-130/301 family regulates pulmonary hypertension (PH), but its breadth of activity remains undefined. Results: Predicted by network analysis, microRNA-130/301 members regulate vasoactive factors such as endothelin-1 for pulmonary vascular cross-talk.
Conclusion:The microRNA-130/301 family promotes vasoconstriction in PH. Significance: This microRNA-based mechanism of vascular cross-talk is central to the systems-wide actions of microRNA-130/301 in PH.
Complex organisms may coordinate molecular responses to hypoxia by specialized avenues of communication across multiple tissues, but these mechanisms are poorly understood. Plasma-based, extracellular microRNAs have been described, yet, their regulation and biological functions in hypoxia remain enigmatic. We found a unique pattern of release of the hypoxia-inducible microRNA-210 (miR-210) from hypoxic and reoxygenated cells. This microRNA is also elevated in human plasma in physiologic and pathologic conditions of altered oxygen demand and delivery. Released miR-210 can be delivered to recipient cells, and its direct suppression of its direct target ISCU and mitochondrial metabolism is primarily evident in hypoxia. To regulate these hypoxia-specific actions, prolyl-hydroxylation of Argonaute 2 acts as a molecular switch that reciprocally modulates miR-210 release and intracellular activity in source cells as well as regulates intracellular activity in recipient cells after miR-210 delivery. Therefore, Argonaute 2-dependent control of released miR-210 represents a unique communication system that integrates the hypoxic response across anatomically distinct cells, preventing unnecessary activity of delivered miR-210 in normoxia while still preparing recipient tissues for incipient hypoxic stress and accelerating adaptation.
The molecular origins of fibrosis affecting multiple tissue beds remain incompletely defined. Previously, we delineated the critical role of the control of extracellular matrix (ECM) stiffening by the mechanosensitive microRNA-130/301 family, as activated by the YAP/TAZ co-transcription factors, in promoting pulmonary hypertension (PH). We hypothesized that similar mechanisms may dictate fibrosis in other tissue beds beyond the pulmonary vasculature. Employing an in silico combination of microRNA target prediction, transcriptomic analysis of 137 human diseases and physiologic states, and advanced gene network modeling, we predicted the microRNA-130/301 family as a master regulator of fibrotic pathways across a cohort of seemingly disparate diseases and conditions. In two such diseases (pulmonary fibrosis and liver fibrosis), inhibition of microRNA-130/301 prevented the induction of ECM modification, YAP/TAZ, and downstream tissue fibrosis. Thus, mechanical forces act through a central feedback circuit between microRNA-130/301 and YAP/TAZ to sustain a common fibrotic phenotype across a network of human physiologic and pathophysiologic states. Such re-conceptualization of interconnections based on shared systems of disease and non-disease gene networks may have broad implications for future convergent diagnostic and therapeutic strategies.
The mtDNA mutator mouse lacks the proofreading capacity of the sole mtDNA polymerase, leading to accumulation of somatic mtDNA mutations, and a profound premature aging phenotype including elevated oxidative stress and apoptosis, and reduced mitochondrial function. We have previously reported that endurance exercise alleviates the aging phenotype in the mutator mice, reduces oxidative stress, and enhances mitochondrial biogenesis. Here we summarize our findings, with the emphasis on the central role of p53 in these adaptations. We demonstrate that mtDNA in sedentary and exercised PolG mice carry similar amounts of mutations in muscle, but in addition to that sedentary mice have more non-mutational damage, which is mitigated by exercise. It follows therefore that the profound alleviation of the mtDNA mutator phenotype in muscle by exercise may not require a reduction in mtDNA mutational load, but rather a decrease of mtDNA damage and/or oxidative stress. We further hypothesize that the observed ‘alleviation without a reduction of mutational load’ implies that the oxidative stress in PolG muscle is maintained, at least in part, by the ‘malicious cycle’, a hypothetical positive feedback potentially driven by the ‘transcriptional mutagenesis’, that is the conversion of chemically modified nucleotides into mutant RNA bases by the mitochondrial RNA polymerase.
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