Davies Jonathan, Karmouty-Quintana Harry, Le Thuy T, Chen Ning-Yuan, Weng Tingting, Luo Fayong, Molina Jose, Moorthy Bhagavatula, Blackburn Michael R
Division of Neonatal-Perinatal Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas.
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, The University of Texas - Houston Medical School, Houston, Texas.
Physiol Rep. 2014 Sep 28;2(9). doi: 10.14814/phy2.12155. Print 2014 Sep 1.
Hyperoxic lung injury is characterized by cellular damage from high oxygen concentrations that lead to an inflammatory response in the lung with cellular infiltration and pulmonary edema. Adenosine is a signaling molecule that is generated extracellularly by CD73 in response to injury. Extracellular adenosine signals through cell surface receptors and has been found to be elevated and plays a protective role in acute injury situations. In particular, ADORA2B activation is protective in acute lung injury. However, little is known about the role of adenosine signaling in hyperoxic lung injury. We hypothesized that hyperoxia-induced lung injury leads to CD73-mediated increases in extracellular adenosine, which is protective through ADORA2B signaling pathways. To test this hypothesis, we exposed C57BL6, CD73(-/-), and Adora2B(-/-) mice to 95% oxygen or room air and examined markers of pulmonary inflammation, edema, and monitored lung histology. Hyperoxic exposure caused pulmonary inflammation and edema in association with elevations in lung adenosine levels. Loss of CD73-mediated extracellular adenosine production exacerbated pulmonary edema without affecting inflammatory cell counts. Furthermore, loss of the ADORA2B had similar results with worsening of pulmonary edema following hyperoxia exposure without affecting inflammatory cell infiltration. This loss of barrier function correlated with a decrease in occludin in pulmonary vasculature in CD73(-/-) and Adora2B(-/-) mice following hyperoxia exposure. These results demonstrate that exposure to a hyperoxic environment causes lung injury associated with an increase in adenosine concentration, and elevated adenosine levels protect vascular barrier function in hyperoxic lung injury through the ADORA2B-dependent regulation of occludin.
高氧性肺损伤的特征是高氧浓度导致细胞损伤,进而引发肺部炎症反应,伴有细胞浸润和肺水肿。腺苷是一种信号分子,由CD73在损伤时于细胞外生成。细胞外腺苷通过细胞表面受体发出信号,并且已发现其在急性损伤情况下水平升高并发挥保护作用。特别是,ADORA2B激活在急性肺损伤中具有保护作用。然而,关于腺苷信号在高氧性肺损伤中的作用知之甚少。我们假设高氧诱导的肺损伤会导致CD73介导的细胞外腺苷增加,其通过ADORA2B信号通路发挥保护作用。为了验证这一假设,我们将C57BL6、CD73基因敲除(-/-)和Adora2B基因敲除(-/-)小鼠暴露于95%氧气或室内空气中,并检测肺部炎症、水肿标志物,同时监测肺组织学情况。高氧暴露导致肺部炎症和水肿,并伴有肺腺苷水平升高。CD73介导的细胞外腺苷生成缺失加剧了肺水肿,但不影响炎症细胞计数。此外,ADORA2B缺失也有类似结果,高氧暴露后肺水肿加重,且不影响炎症细胞浸润。这种屏障功能的丧失与高氧暴露后CD73(-/-)和Adora2B(-/-)小鼠肺血管中闭合蛋白的减少相关。这些结果表明,暴露于高氧环境会导致与腺苷浓度增加相关的肺损伤,并且升高的腺苷水平通过ADORA2B依赖性的闭合蛋白调节在高氧性肺损伤中保护血管屏障功能。