RESUMO
BACKGROUND: Mitochondrial dysfunction, characterized by impaired lipid metabolism and heightened reactive oxygen species generation, results in lipid peroxidation and ferroptosis. Ferroptosis is an inflammatory mode of cell death that promotes complement activation and macrophage recruitment. In pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), pulmonary arterial endothelial cells exhibit cellular phenotypes that promote ferroptosis. Moreover, there is ectopic complement deposition and inflammatory macrophage accumulation in the pulmonary vasculature. However, the effects of ferroptosis inhibition on these pathogenic mechanisms and the cellular landscape of the pulmonary vasculature are incompletely defined. METHODS: Multiomics and physiological analyses evaluated how ferroptosis inhibition-modulated preclinical PAH. The impact of adeno-associated virus 1-mediated expression of the proferroptotic protein ACSL (acyl-CoA synthetase long-chain family member) 4 on PAH was determined, and a genetic association study in humans further probed the relationship between ferroptosis and pulmonary hypertension. RESULTS: Ferrostatin-1, a small-molecule ferroptosis inhibitor, mitigated PAH severity in monocrotaline rats. RNA-sequencing and proteomics analyses demonstrated that ferroptosis was associated with PAH severity. RNA-sequencing, proteomics, and confocal microscopy revealed that complement activation and proinflammatory cytokines/chemokines were suppressed by ferrostatin-1. In addition, ferrostatin-1 combatted changes in endothelial, smooth muscle, and interstitial macrophage abundance and gene activation patterns as revealed by deconvolution RNA-sequencing. Ferroptotic pulmonary arterial endothelial cell damage-associated molecular patterns restructured the transcriptomic signature and mitochondrial morphology, promoted the proliferation of pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells, and created a proinflammatory phenotype in monocytes in vitro. Adeno-associated virus 1-Acsl4 induced an inflammatory PAH phenotype in rats. Finally, single-nucleotide polymorphisms in 6 ferroptosis genes identified a potential link between ferroptosis and pulmonary hypertension severity in the Vanderbilt BioVU repository. CONCLUSIONS: Ferroptosis promotes PAH through metabolic and inflammatory mechanisms in the pulmonary vasculature.
RESUMO
BACKGROUND: Right ventricular failure (RVF) is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in multiple cardiovascular diseases, but there are no treatments for RVF as therapeutic targets are not clearly defined. Contemporary transcriptomic/proteomic evaluations of RVF are predominately conducted in small animal studies, and data from large animal models are sparse. Moreover, a comparison of the molecular mediators of RVF across species is lacking. METHODS: Transcriptomics and proteomics analyses defined the pathways associated with cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-derived values of RV hypertrophy, dilation, and dysfunction in control and pulmonary artery banded (PAB) pigs. Publicly available data from rat monocrotaline-induced RVF and pulmonary arterial hypertension patients with preserved or impaired RV function were used to compare molecular responses across species. RESULTS: PAB pigs displayed significant right ventricle/ventricular (RV) hypertrophy, dilation, and dysfunction as quantified by cardiac magnetic resonance imaging. Transcriptomic and proteomic analyses identified pathways associated with RV dysfunction and remodeling in PAB pigs. Surprisingly, disruptions in fatty acid oxidation (FAO) and electron transport chain (ETC) proteins were different across the 3 species. FAO and ETC proteins and transcripts were mostly downregulated in rats but were predominately upregulated in PAB pigs, which more closely matched the human response. All species exhibited similar dysregulation of the dilated cardiomyopathy and arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy pathways. CONCLUSIONS: The porcine metabolic molecular signature was more similar to human RVF than rodents. These data suggest there may be divergent molecular responses of RVF across species, and pigs may more accurately recapitulate metabolic aspects of human RVF.
Assuntos
Insuficiência Cardíaca , Disfunção Ventricular Direita , Humanos , Ratos , Animais , Suínos , Multiômica , Proteômica , Hipertrofia Ventricular Direita/diagnóstico por imagem , Hipertrofia Ventricular Direita/etiologia , Hipertrofia Ventricular Direita/patologia , Função Ventricular Direita , Modelos Animais de Doenças , Remodelação Ventricular/fisiologiaRESUMO
Right ventricular dysfunction (RVD) is a risk factor for mortality in multiple cardiovascular diseases, but approaches to combat RVD are lacking. Therapies used for left heart failure are largely ineffective in RVD, and thus the identification of molecules that augment RV function could improve outcomes in a wide-array of cardiac limitations. Junctophilin-2 (JPH2) is an essential protein that plays important roles in cardiomyocytes, including calcium handling/maintenance of t-tubule structure and gene transcription. Additionally, JPH2 may regulate mitochondrial function as Jph2 knockout mice exhibit cardiomyocyte mitochondrial swelling and cristae derangements. Moreover, JPH2 knockdown in embryonic stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes induces downregulation of the mitochondrial protein mitofusin-2 (MFN2), which disrupts mitochondrial cristae structure and transmembrane potential. Impaired mitochondrial metabolism drives RVD, and here we evaluated the mitochondrial role of JPH2. We showed JPH2 directly interacts with MFN2, ablation of JPH2 suppresses mitochondrial biogenesis, oxidative capacity, and impairs lipid handling in iPSC-CM. Gene therapy with AAV9-JPH2 corrects RV mitochondrial morphological defects, mitochondrial fatty acid metabolism enzyme regulation, and restores the RV lipidomic signature in the monocrotaline rat model of RVD. Finally, AAV-JPH2 improves RV function without altering PAH severity, showing JPH2 provides an inotropic effect to the dysfunction RV.
RESUMO
Intermittent fasting (IF) extends life span via pleotropic mechanisms, but one important molecular mediator is adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase (AMPK). AMPK enhances lipid metabolism and modulates microtubule dynamics. Dysregulation of these molecular pathways causes right ventricular (RV) failure in patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension. In rodent pulmonary arterial hypertension, IF activates RV AMPK, which restores mitochondrial and peroxisomal morphology and restructures mitochondrial and peroxisomal lipid metabolism protein regulation. In addition, IF increases electron transport chain protein abundance and activity in the right ventricle. Echocardiographic and hemodynamic measures of RV function are positively associated with fatty acid oxidation and electron transport chain protein levels. IF also combats heightened microtubule density, which normalizes transverse tubule structure.
RESUMO
Right ventricular failure (RVF) is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in multiple cardiovascular diseases, but there are no approved treatments for RVF as therapeutic targets are not clearly defined. Contemporary transcriptomic/proteomic evaluations of RVF are predominately conducted in small animal studies, and data from large animal models are sparse. Moreover, a comparison of the molecular mediators of RVF across species is lacking. Here, we used transcriptomics and proteomics analyses to define the molecular pathways associated with cardiac MRI-derived values of RV hypertrophy, dilation, and dysfunction in pulmonary artery banded (PAB) piglets. Publicly available data from rat monocrotaline-induced RVF and pulmonary arterial hypertension patients with preserved or impaired RV function were used to compare the three species. Transcriptomic and proteomic analyses identified multiple pathways that were associated with RV dysfunction and remodeling in PAB pigs. Surprisingly, disruptions in fatty acid oxidation (FAO) and electron transport chain (ETC) proteins were different across the three species. FAO and ETC proteins and transcripts were mostly downregulated in rats, but were predominately upregulated in PAB pigs, which more closely matched the human data. Thus, the pig PAB metabolic molecular signature was more similar to human RVF than rodents. These data suggest there may be divergent molecular responses of RVF across species, and that pigs more accurately recapitulate the metabolic aspects of human RVF.
RESUMO
Background We previously reported that resuscitation delivering electrical shocks guided by real-time ventricular fibrillation amplitude spectral area (AMSA) enabled return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) with fewer shocks, resulting in less myocardial dysfunction. We now hypothesized that AMSA could also guide delivery of epinephrine, expecting further outcome improvement consequent to less electrical and adrenergic burdens. Methods and Results A swine model of ventricular fibrillation was used to compare after 10 minutes of untreated ventricular fibrillation a guidelines-driven (n=8) resuscitation protocol, delivering shocks every 2 minutes and epinephrine every 4 minutes, with an AMSA-driven shocks (n=8) protocol, delivering epinephrine every 4 minutes, and with an AMSA-driven shocks and epinephrine (ADSE; n=8) protocol. For guidelines-driven, AMSA-driven shocks, and ADSE protocols, the time to ROSC (mean±SD) was 569±164, 410±111, and 400±80 seconds (P=0.045); the number of shocks (mean±SD) was 5±2, 3±1, and 3±2 (P=0.024) with ADSE fewer than guidelines-driven (P=0.03); and the doses of epinephrine (median [interquartile range]) were 2.0 (1.3-3.0), 1.0 (1.0-2.8), and 1.0 (0.3-3.0) (P=0.419). The ROSC rate was similar, yet survival after ROSC favored AMSA-driven protocols (guidelines-driven, 3/6; AMSA-driven shocks, 6/6; and ADSE, 7/7; P=0.019 by log-rank test). Left ventricular function and survival after ROSC correlated inversely with electrical burden (ie, cumulative unsuccessful shocks, J/kg; P=0.020 and P=0.046) and adrenergic burden (ie, total epinephrine doses, mg/kg; P=0.042 and P=0.002). Conclusions Despite similar ROSC rates achieved with all 3 protocols, AMSA-driven shocks and ADSE resulted in less postresuscitation myocardial dysfunction and better survival, attributed to attaining ROSC with less electrical and adrenergic myocardial burdens.