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1.
Pulm Circ ; 7(1): 186-199, 2017 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28680578

ABSTRACT

Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is increasingly recognized as a systemic disease driven by alteration in the normal functioning of multiple metabolic pathways affecting all of the major carbon substrates, including amino acids. We found that human pulmonary hypertension patients (WHO Group I, PAH) exhibit systemic and pulmonary-specific alterations in glutamine metabolism, with the diseased pulmonary vasculature taking up significantly more glutamine than that of controls. Using cell culture models and transgenic mice expressing PAH-causing BMPR2 mutations, we found that the pulmonary endothelium in PAH shunts significantly more glutamine carbon into the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle than wild-type endothelium. Increased glutamine metabolism through the TCA cycle is required by the endothelium in PAH to survive, to sustain normal energetics, and to manifest the hyperproliferative phenotype characteristic of disease. The strict requirement for glutamine is driven by loss of sirtuin-3 (SIRT3) activity through covalent modification by reactive products of lipid peroxidation. Using 2-hydroxybenzylamine, a scavenger of reactive lipid peroxidation products, we were able to preserve SIRT3 function, to normalize glutamine metabolism, and to prevent the development of PAH in BMPR2 mutant mice. In PAH, targeting glutamine metabolism and the mechanisms that underlie glutamine-driven metabolic reprogramming represent a viable novel avenue for the development of potentially disease-modifying therapeutics that could be rapidly translated to human studies.

2.
Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol ; 49(5): 778-87, 2013 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23742019

ABSTRACT

Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) has been associated with a number of different but interrelated pathogenic mechanisms. Metabolic and oxidative stresses have been shown to play important pathogenic roles in a variety of model systems. However, many of these relationships remain at the level of association. We sought to establish a direct role for metabolic stress and oxidant injury in the pathogenesis of PAH. Mice that universally express a disease-causing mutation in bone morphogenic protein receptor 2 (Bmpr2) were exposed to room air or to brief daily hyperoxia (95% oxygen for 3 h) for 6 weeks, and were compared with wild-type animals undergoing identical exposures. In both murine tissues and cultured endothelial cells, the expression of mutant Bmpr2 was sufficient to cause oxidant injury that was particularly pronounced in mitochondrial membranes. With the enhancement of mitochondrial generation of reactive oxygen species by hyperoxia, oxidant injury was substantially enhanced in mitochondrial membranes, even in tissues distant from the lung. Hyperoxia, despite its vasodilatory actions in the pulmonary circulation, significantly worsened the PAH phenotype (elevated right ventricular systolic pressure, decreased cardiac output, and increased pulmonary vascular occlusion) in Bmpr2 mutant animals. These experiments demonstrate that oxidant injury and metabolic stress contribute directly to disease development, and provide further evidence for PAH as a systemic disease with life-limiting cardiopulmonary manifestations.


Subject(s)
Bone Morphogenetic Protein Receptors, Type II/metabolism , Endothelial Cells/metabolism , Hyperoxia/complications , Hypertension, Pulmonary/etiology , Lung Injury/etiology , Lung/blood supply , Mutation , Oxidative Stress , Stress, Physiological , Animals , Arterial Pressure , Bone Morphogenetic Protein Receptors, Type II/genetics , Cardiac Output , Cell Line, Tumor , Disease Models, Animal , Endothelial Cells/pathology , Familial Primary Pulmonary Hypertension , Humans , Hyperoxia/genetics , Hyperoxia/metabolism , Hypertension, Pulmonary/genetics , Hypertension, Pulmonary/metabolism , Hypertension, Pulmonary/pathology , Hypertension, Pulmonary/physiopathology , Lung Injury/genetics , Lung Injury/metabolism , Lung Injury/pathology , Lung Injury/physiopathology , Mice , Mice, Transgenic , Mitochondria/metabolism , Mitochondria/pathology , Mitochondrial Membranes/metabolism , Mitochondrial Membranes/pathology , Pulmonary Artery/metabolism , Pulmonary Artery/physiopathology , Reactive Oxygen Species/metabolism , Ventricular Function, Right , Ventricular Pressure
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