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PAI-1 deficiency drives pulmonary vascular smooth muscle remodeling and pulmonary hypertension.

Authors :
Kudryashova TV
Zaitsev SV
Jiang L
Buckley BJ
McGuckin JP
Goncharov D
Zhyvylo I
Lin D
Newcomb G
Piper B
Bogamuwa S
Saiyed A
Teos L
Pena A
Ranson M
Greenland JR
Wolters PJ
Kelso MJ
Poncz M
DeLisser HM
Cines DB
Goncharova EA
Farkas L
Stepanova V
Source :
American journal of physiology. Lung cellular and molecular physiology [Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol] 2024 Sep 01; Vol. 327 (3), pp. L319-L326. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Jun 11.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a progressive disease characterized by vasoconstriction and remodeling of small pulmonary arteries (PAs). Central to the remodeling process is a switch of pulmonary vascular cells to a proliferative, apoptosis-resistant phenotype. Plasminogen activator inhibitors-1 and -2 (PAI-1 and PAI-2) are the primary physiological inhibitors of urokinase-type and tissue-type plasminogen activators (uPA and tPA), but their roles in PAH are unsettled. Here, we report that: 1 ) PAI-1, but not PAI-2, is deficient in remodeled small PAs and in early-passage PA smooth muscle and endothelial cells (PASMCs and PAECs) from subjects with PAH compared with controls; 2 ) PAI-1 <superscript>-/-</superscript> mice spontaneously develop pulmonary vascular remodeling associated with upregulation of mTORC1 signaling, pulmonary hypertension (PH), and right ventricle (RV) hypertrophy; and 3 ) pharmacological inhibition of uPA in human PAH PASMCs suppresses proproliferative mTORC1 and SMAD3 signaling, restores PAI-1 levels, reduces proliferation, and induces apoptosis in vitro, and prevents the development of SU5416/hypoxia-induced PH and RV hypertrophy in vivo in mice. These data strongly suggest that downregulation of PAI-1 in small PAs promotes vascular remodeling and PH due to unopposed activation of uPA and consequent upregulation of mTOR and transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β) signaling in PASMCs, and call for further studies to determine the potential benefits of targeting the PAI-1/uPA imbalance to attenuate and/or reverse pulmonary vascular remodeling and PH. NEW & NOTEWORTHY This study identifies a novel role for the deficiency of plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI)-1 and resultant unrestricted uPA activity in PASMC remodeling and PH in vitro and in vivo, provides novel mechanistic link from PAI-1 loss through uPA-induced Akt/mTOR and TGFβ-Smad3 upregulation to pulmonary vascular remodeling in PH, and suggests that inhibition of uPA to rebalance the uPA-PAI-1 tandem might provide a novel approach to complement current therapies used to mitigate this pulmonary vascular disease.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1522-1504
Volume :
327
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
American journal of physiology. Lung cellular and molecular physiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38860847
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1152/ajplung.00110.2024