4.2 Article

Dysfunctional BMPR2 signaling drives an abnormal endothelial requirement for glutamine in pulmonary arterial hypertension

期刊

PULMONARY CIRCULATION
卷 7, 期 1, 页码 186-199

出版社

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1086/690236

关键词

glutaminolysis; metabolic reprogramming; mitochondria; bone morphogenic protein receptor type 2 (BMPR2); tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle

资金

  1. NIH [K08 HL121174, K23 HL098743, R01 HL095797, R01 CA185747, P01 HL108800, T32 HL007106-34, T32 HL-007891]
  2. American Heart Association Fellow to Faculty Grant [13FTF16070002]
  3. National Science Foundation (NSF) CAREER [CBET-0955251]
  4. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program
  5. ENTELLIGENCE Young Investigators Award Program - Actelion Pharmaceuticals
  6. Gilead Sciences Research Scholars Program in Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension
  7. Parker B. Francis Foundation fellowship
  8. CTSA from the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences [UL1TR000445]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

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 diseasemodifying therapeutics that could be rapidly translated to human studies.

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