RESUMEN
Hypoxia-induced pulmonary hypertension is characterized by progressive remodeling of the pulmonary artery (PA) system and loss of the transcription factor, cAMP response element binding protein (CREB) in PA smooth muscle cells (SMCs). Previous in vitro studies suggested that platelet-derived growth factor, a mitogen produced in the hypoxic arterial wall, elicits loss of CREB in medial SMCs via the PI3K/Akt pathway. These events trigger switching of SMCs from a quiescent, contractile phenotype to a proliferative, migratory, dedifferentiated, and synthetic phenotype, which contributes to PA thickening. Here, we investigated whether inhibition of PI3K or Akt could attenuate arterial remodeling in the lung and prevent CREB loss in PA medial SMCs in rats subjected to chronic hypoxia. Inhibition of either enzyme-blunted hypoxia-induced PA remodeling and SMC CREB depletion and diminished SMC proliferation and collagen deposition. Inhibition of Akt, but not PI3K, suppressed muscularization of distal arterioles and blunted right ventricular hypertrophy. Interestingly, mean PA pressure was elevated equally by hypoxia in untreated and inhibitor-treated groups but was normalized acutely by the Rho kinase inhibitor, Fasudil. We conclude that PI3K and Akt inhibitors can attenuate hypoxia-induced PA remodeling and SMC CREB depletion but fail to block the development of pulmonary hypertension because of their inability to repress Rho kinase-mediated vasoconstriction.