4.5 Article

Nitric oxide is required for lung alveolarization revealed by deficiency of argininosuccinate lyase

Journal

HUMAN MOLECULAR GENETICS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddad158

Keywords

urea cycle; argininosuccinate lyase; nitric oxide; alveolarization

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Inhaled nitric oxide therapy can improve lung growth in premature newborns, but the mechanisms by which nitric oxide regulates lung development are still not clear. Nitric oxide is produced by three isoforms of nitric oxide synthase enzymes, and mice lacking these isoforms show impaired lung alveolarization, indicating the important role of nitric oxide in lung development. The enzyme argininosuccinate lyase is required for nitric oxide synthesis, and its deficiency is a model for nitric oxide deficiency. In this study, lung alveolarization was decreased in argininosuccinate lyase-deficient mice, and supplementation of nitric oxide partially restored lung alveolarization. Endothelial-specific knockout mice also showed impaired lung alveolarization, further supporting the role of endothelial-derived nitric oxide in promoting lung development.
Inhaled nitric oxide (NO) therapy has been reported to improve lung growth in premature newborns. However, the underlying mechanisms by which NO regulates lung development remain largely unclear. NO is enzymatically produced by three isoforms of nitric oxide synthase (NOS) enzymes. NOS knockout mice are useful tools to investigate NO function in the lung. Each single NOS knockout mouse does not show obvious lung alveolar phenotype, likely due to compensatory mechanisms. While mice lacking all three NOS isoforms display impaired lung alveolarization, implicating NO plays a pivotal role in lung alveolarization. Argininosuccinate lyase (ASL) is the only mammalian enzyme capable of synthesizing L-arginine, the sole precursor for NOS-dependent NO synthesis. ASL is also required for channeling extracellular L-arginine into a NO-synthetic complex. Thus, ASL deficiency (ASLD) is a non-redundant model for cell-autonomous, NOS-dependent NO deficiency. Here, we assessed lung alveolarization in ASL-deficient mice. Hypomorphic deletion of Asl (Asl(Neo/Neo)) results in decreased lung alveolarization, accompanied with reduced level of S-nitrosylation in the lung. Genetic ablation of one copy of Caveolin-1, which is a negative regulator of NO production, restores total S-nitrosylation as well as lung alveolarization in Asl(Neo/Neo) mice. Importantly, NO supplementation could partially rescue lung alveolarization in Asl(Neo/Neo) mice. Furthermore, endothelial-specific knockout mice (VE-Cadherin Cre; Asl(flox/flox)) exhibit impaired lung alveolarization at 12 weeks old, supporting an essential role of endothelial-derived NO in the enhancement of lung alveolarization. Thus, we propose that ASLD is a model to study NO-mediated lung alveolarization.

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