Vascular Physiology Group, Department of Cell Biology and Physiology, University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center, Albuquerque, New Mexico.
Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2014 Jan 1;306(1):H41-52. doi: 10.1152/ajpheart.00269.2013. Epub 2013 Nov 1.
Chronic hypoxia (CH) associated with respiratory disease results in elevated pulmonary vascular intracellular Ca(2+) concentration, which elicits enhanced vasoconstriction and promotes vascular arterial remodeling and thus has important implications in the development of pulmonary hypertension (PH). Store-operated Ca(2+) entry (SOCE) contributes to this elevated intracellular Ca(2+) concentration and has also been linked to acute hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction (HPV). Since our laboratory has recently demonstrated an important role for acid-sensing ion channel 1 (ASIC1) in mediating SOCE, we hypothesized that ASIC1 contributes to both HPV and the development of CH-induced PH. To test this hypothesis, we examined responses to acute hypoxia in isolated lungs and assessed the effects of CH on indexes of PH, arterial remodeling, and vasoconstrictor reactivity in wild-type (ASIC1(+/+)) and ASIC1 knockout (ASIC1(-/-)) mice. Restoration of ASIC1 expression in pulmonary arterial smooth muscle cells from ASIC1(-/-) mice rescued SOCE, confirming the requirement for ASIC1 in this response. HPV responses were blunted in lungs from ASIC1(-/-) mice. Both SOCE and receptor-mediated Ca(2+) entry, along with agonist-dependent vasoconstrictor responses, were diminished in small pulmonary arteries from control ASIC(-/-) mice compared with ASIC(+/+) mice. The effects of CH to augment receptor-mediated vasoconstrictor and SOCE responses in vessels from ASIC1(+/+) mice were not observed after CH in ASIC1(-/-) mice. In addition, ASIC1(-/-) mice exhibited diminished right ventricular systolic pressure, right ventricular hypertrophy, and arterial remodeling in response to CH compared with ASIC1(+/+) mice. Taken together, these data demonstrate an important role for ASIC1 in both HPV and the development of CH-induced PH.
慢性低氧(CH)与呼吸疾病相关,导致肺血管细胞内 Ca(2+)浓度升高,引发血管强烈收缩,并促进血管动脉重塑,因此对肺动脉高压(PH)的发展具有重要意义。储存操纵的 Ca(2+)内流(SOCE)促成了这种升高的细胞内 Ca(2+)浓度,并且与急性低氧性肺血管收缩(HPV)也有关联。由于我们的实验室最近证明了酸感应离子通道 1(ASIC1)在介导 SOCE 方面具有重要作用,因此我们假设 ASIC1 既参与 HPV 又参与 CH 诱导的 PH 的发展。为了验证这一假设,我们检查了离体肺对急性低氧的反应,并评估了 CH 对 PH、动脉重塑和血管收缩反应性的影响,在野生型(ASIC1(+/+))和 ASIC1 敲除(ASIC1(-/-))小鼠中。在 ASIC1(-/-)小鼠的肺动脉平滑肌细胞中恢复 ASIC1 表达,证实了 ASIC1 在该反应中的必要性。ASIC1(-/-)小鼠的 HPV 反应减弱。与 ASIC(+/+)小鼠相比,来自对照 ASIC(-/-)小鼠的小肺动脉中的 SOCE 和受体介导的 Ca(2+)内流以及激动剂依赖性血管收缩反应均减弱。与 ASIC(+/+)小鼠相比,CH 对增强血管中受体介导的血管收缩和 SOCE 反应的作用在 ASIC1(-/-)小鼠中没有观察到。此外,与 ASIC1(+/+)小鼠相比,ASIC1(-/-)小鼠在 CH 下表现出右心室收缩压、右心室肥厚和动脉重塑的降低。总之,这些数据表明 ASIC1 在 HPV 和 CH 诱导的 PH 的发展中都具有重要作用。