Bhandari Vineet, Choo-Wing Rayman, Lee Chun G, Yusuf Kamran, Nedrelow Jonathan H, Ambalavanan Namasivayam, Malkus Herbert, Homer Robert J, Elias Jack A
Division of Perinatal Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, New Haven, CT 06520-8057, USA.
Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol. 2008 Oct;39(4):420-30. doi: 10.1165/rcmb.2007-0024OC. Epub 2008 Apr 25.
Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) is known to have a pivotal role in lung development and in a variety of pathologic conditions in the adult lung. Our earlier studies have shown that NO is a critical mediator of VEGF-induced vascular and extravascular effects in the adult murine lung. As significant differences have been reported in the cytokine responses in the adult versus the neonatal lung, we hypothesized that there may be significant differences in VEGF-induced alterations in the developing as opposed to the mature lung. Furthermore, nitric oxide (NO) mediation of these VEGF-induced effects may be developmentally regulated. Using a novel externally regulatable lung-targeted transgenic murine model, we found that VEGF-induced pulmonary hemorrhage was mediated by NO-dependent mechanisms in adults and newborns. VEGF enhanced surfactant production in adults as well as increased surfactant and lung development in newborns, via an NO-independent mechanism. While the enhanced survival in hyperoxia in the adult was partly NO-dependent, there was enhanced hyperoxia-induced lung injury in the newborn. In addition, human amniotic fluid VEGF levels correlated positively with surfactant phospholipids. Tracheal aspirate VEGF levels had an initial spike, followed by a decline, and then a subsequent rise, in human neonates with an outcome of bronchopulmonary dysplasia or death. Our data show that VEGF can have injurious as well as potentially beneficial developmental effects, of which some are NO dependent, others NO independent. This opens up the possibility of selective manipulation of any VEGF-based intervention using NO inhibitors for maximal potential clinical benefit.
血管内皮生长因子(VEGF)在肺发育以及成体肺的多种病理状况中起着关键作用。我们早期的研究表明,NO是成年小鼠肺中VEGF诱导的血管和血管外效应的关键介质。由于已报道成年肺与新生肺在细胞因子反应方面存在显著差异,我们推测在发育中的肺与成熟肺中,VEGF诱导的改变可能存在显著差异。此外,这些VEGF诱导效应的一氧化氮(NO)介导可能受到发育调控。使用一种新型的可外部调控的肺靶向转基因小鼠模型,我们发现VEGF诱导的肺出血在成年和新生小鼠中均由NO依赖机制介导。VEGF通过不依赖NO的机制增强成年小鼠的表面活性剂产生,并增加新生小鼠的表面活性剂和肺发育。虽然成年小鼠在高氧环境下存活率的提高部分依赖于NO,但新生小鼠高氧诱导的肺损伤却增强。此外,人羊水VEGF水平与表面活性剂磷脂呈正相关。在患有支气管肺发育不良或死亡结局的人类新生儿中,气管吸出物VEGF水平最初会出现峰值,随后下降,然后再次上升。我们的数据表明,VEGF可产生有害以及潜在有益的发育效应,其中一些效应依赖于NO,另一些则不依赖于NO。这为使用NO抑制剂选择性操纵任何基于VEGF的干预措施以实现最大潜在临床益处开辟了可能性。