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1.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38861354

RESUMO

Numerous studies have demonstrated that endostatin (ES), a potent angiostatic peptide derived from collagen type XVIII alpha 1 chain and encoded by COL18A1, is elevated in pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). Importantly, elevated ES has consistently been associated with altered hemodynamics, poor functional status, and adverse outcomes in adult and pediatric PAH. This study used serum samples from patients with Group I PAH and plasma and tissue samples derived from the Sugen/Chronic hypoxic (SuHx) rat pulmonary hypertension (PH) model to define associations between COL18A1/ES and disease development, including hemodynamics, right ventricular (RV) remodeling, and RV dysfunction. Using cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging and advanced hemodynamic assessments with pressure-volume (PV) loops in patients with PAH to assess RV-pulmonary arterial (PA) coupling, we observed a strong relationship between circulating ES levels and metrics of RV structure and function. Specifically, RV mass and the ventricular mass index (VMI) were positively associated with ES while RV ejection fraction and RV-PA coupling were inversely associated with ES levels. Our animal data demonstrates that the development of PH is associated with increased COL18A1/ES in the heart as well as the lungs. Disease-associated increases in COL18A1 mRNA and protein were most pronounced in the RV compared to the left ventricle (LV) and lung. COL18A1 expression in the RV was strongly associated with disease-associated changes in RV mass, fibrosis, and myocardial capillary density. These findings indicate that COL18A1/ES increase early in disease development in the RV and implicate COL18A1/ES in pathologic RV dysfunction in PAH.

2.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38651694

RESUMO

We sought to investigate differential metabolism in patients with systemic sclerosis (SSc) who develop pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) versus those who do not, as a method of identifying potential disease biomarkers. In a nested case-control design, serum metabolites were assayed in SSc subjects who developed right heart catheterization-confirmed PAH (n=22) while under surveillance in a longitudinal cohort from Johns Hopkins, then compared to metabolites assayed in matched SSc patients who did not develop PAH (n=22). Serum samples were collected at "proximate" (within 12 months) and "distant" (within 1-5 years) time points relative to PAH diagnosis. Metabolites were identified using liquid chromatography-mass spectroscopy (LC-MS). An LC-MS dataset from SSc subjects with either mildly elevated pulmonary pressures or overt PAH from the University of Michigan was compared. Differentially abundant metabolites were tested as predictors of PAH in two additional validation SSc cohorts. Long-chain fatty acid metabolism (LCFA) consistently differed in SSc-PAH versus SSc without PH. LCFA metabolites discriminated SSc-PAH patients with mildly elevated pressures in the Michigan cohort and predicted SSc-PAH up to two years prior to clinical diagnosis in the Hopkins cohort. Acylcholines containing LCFA residues and linoleic acid metabolites were most important for discriminating SSc-PAH. Combinations of acylcholines and linoleic acid metabolites provided good discrimination of SSc-PAH across cohorts. Aberrant lipid metabolism is observed throughout the evolution of PAH in SSc. Lipidomic signatures of abnormal LCFA metabolism distinguish SSc-PAH patients from those without PH, including prior to clinical diagnosis and in mild disease.

3.
Front Med (Lausanne) ; 10: 1264906, 2023.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37828949

RESUMO

Systemic sclerosis is an autoimmune disorder of the connective tissue characterized by disordered inflammation and fibrosis leading to skin thickening and visceral organ complications. Pulmonary involvement, in the form of pulmonary arterial hypertension and/or interstitial lung disease, is the leading cause of morbidity and mortality among individuals with scleroderma. There are no disease-specific therapies for pulmonary involvement of scleroderma, and pulmonary arterial hypertension in this cohort has typically been associated with worse outcomes and less clinical response to modern therapy compared to other forms of Group I pulmonary hypertension in the classification from the World Symposium on Pulmonary Hypertension. Ongoing research aims to delineate how pathologic microvascular remodeling and fibrosis contribute to this poor response and offer a window into future therapeutic targets.

4.
Pulm Circ ; 13(3): e12260, 2023 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37404901

RESUMO

Although PAH is partially attributed to disordered metabolism, previous human studies have mostly examined circulating metabolites at a single time point, potentially overlooking crucial disease biology. Current knowledge gaps include an understanding of temporal changes that occur within and across relevant tissues, and whether observed metabolic changes might contribute to disease pathobiology. We utilized targeted tissue metabolomics in the Sugen hypoxia (SuHx) rodent model to investigate tissue-specific metabolic relationships with pulmonary hypertensive features over time using regression modeling and time-series analysis. Our hypotheses were that some metabolic changes would precede phenotypic changes, and that examining metabolic interactions across heart, lung, and liver tissues would yield insight into interconnected metabolic mechanisms. To support the relevance of our findings, we sought to establish links between SuHx tissue metabolomics and human PAH -omics data using bioinformatic predictions. Metabolic differences between and within tissue types were evident by Day 7 postinduction, demonstrating distinct tissue-specific metabolism in experimental pulmonary hypertension. Various metabolites demonstrated significant tissue-specific associations with hemodynamics and RV remodeling. Individual metabolite profiles were dynamic, and some metabolic shifts temporally preceded the emergence of overt pulmonary hypertension and RV remodeling. Metabolic interactions were observed such that abundance of several liver metabolites modulated lung and RV metabolite-phenotype relationships. Taken all together, regression analyses, pathway analyses and time-series analyses implicated aspartate and glutamate signaling and transport, glycine homeostasis, lung nucleotide abundance, and oxidative stress as relevant to early PAH pathobiology. These findings offer valuable insights into potential targets for early intervention in PAH.

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