4.5 Article

Physiologic and molecular consequences of endothelial Bmpr2 mutation

Journal

RESPIRATORY RESEARCH
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BIOMED CENTRAL LTD
DOI: 10.1186/1465-9921-12-84

Keywords

Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension; mouse model; pulmonary vascular disease

Funding

  1. National Institute of Health [HL82694, HL071596, HL079315, HL014985, HL091105]

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Background: Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is thought to be driven by dysfunction of pulmonary vascular microendothelial cells (PMVEC). Most hereditary PAH is associated with BMPR2 mutations. However, the physiologic and molecular consequences of expression of BMPR2 mutations in PMVEC are unknown. Methods: In vivo experiments were performed on adult mice with conditional endothelial-specific expression of the truncation mutation Bmpr2(delx4+), with age-matched transactivator-only mice as controls. Phenotype was assessed by RVSP, counts of muscularized vessels and proliferating cells, and staining for thromboses, inflammatory cells, and apoptotic cells. The effects of BMPR2 knockdown in PMVEC by siRNA on rates of apoptosis were assessed. Affymetrix expression arrays were performed on PMVEC isolated and cultured from triple transgenic mice carrying the immortomouse gene, a transactivator, and either control, Bmpr2(delx4+) or Bmpr2(R899X) mutation. Results: Transgenic mice showed increased RVSP and corresponding muscularization of small vessels, with histologic alterations including thrombosis, increased inflammatory cells, increased proliferating cells, and a moderate increase in apoptotic cells. Expression arrays showed alterations in specific pathways consistent with the histologic changes. Bmpr2(delx4+) and Bmpr2(R899X) mutations resulted in very similar alterations in proliferation, apoptosis, metabolism, and adhesion; Bmpr2(delx4+) cells showed upregulation of platelet adhesion genes and cytokines not seen in Bmpr2(R899X) PMVEC. Bmpr2 mutation in PMVEC does not cause a loss of differentiation markers as was seen with Bmpr2 mutation in smooth muscle cells. Conclusions: Bmpr2 mutation in PMVEC in vivo may drive PAH through multiple, potentially independent, downstream mechanisms, including proliferation, apoptosis, inflammation, and thrombosis.

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