Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan;
Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania;
Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2016 Jul 1;311(1):H286-98. doi: 10.1152/ajpheart.00572.2015. Epub 2016 May 20.
Despite the fact that nucleotides and adenosine help regulate vascular tone through purinergic signaling pathways, little is known regarding their contributions to the pathobiology of pulmonary arterial hypertension, a condition characterized by elevated pulmonary vascular resistance and remodeling. Even less is known about the potential role that alterations in CD39 (ENTPD1), the ectonucleotidase responsible for the conversion of the nucleotides ATP and ADP to AMP, may play in pulmonary arterial hypertension. In this study we identified decreased CD39 expression on the pulmonary endothelium of patients with idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension. We next determined the effects of CD39 gene deletion in mice exposed to normoxia or normobaric hypoxia (10% oxygen). Compared with controls, hypoxic CD39(-/-) mice were found to have a markedly elevated ATP-to-adenosine ratio, higher pulmonary arterial pressures, more right ventricular hypertrophy, more arterial medial hypertrophy, and a pro-thrombotic phenotype. In addition, hypoxic CD39(-/-) mice exhibited a marked increase in lung P2X1 receptors. Systemic reconstitution of ATPase and ADPase enzymatic activities through continuous administration of apyrase decreased pulmonary arterial pressures in hypoxic CD39(-/-) mice to levels found in hypoxic CD39(+/+) controls. Treatment with NF279, a potent and selective P2X1 receptor antagonist, lowered pulmonary arterial pressures even further. Our study is the first to implicate decreased CD39 and resultant alterations in circulating purinergic signaling ligands and cognate receptors in the pathobiology of pulmonary arterial hypertension. Reconstitution and receptor blocking experiments suggest that phosphohydrolysis of purinergic nucleotide tri- and diphosphates, or blocking of the P2X1 receptor could serve as treatment for pulmonary arterial hypertension.
尽管核苷酸和腺苷通过嘌呤能信号通路帮助调节血管张力,但对于它们在肺动脉高压(一种以肺血管阻力增加和重构为特征的疾病)的病理生物学中的作用知之甚少。对于负责将核苷酸 ATP 和 ADP 转化为 AMP 的酶 CD39(ENTPD1)的改变可能在肺动脉高压中发挥的潜在作用,了解得就更少了。在这项研究中,我们发现在特发性肺动脉高压患者的肺内皮细胞上 CD39 表达降低。接下来,我们确定了在常氧或常压低氧(10%氧气)暴露的小鼠中 CD39 基因缺失的影响。与对照组相比,低氧 CD39(-/-) 小鼠的 ATP 到腺苷的比值明显升高,肺动脉压升高,右心室肥厚更严重,动脉中层肥厚更明显,表现出促血栓形成的表型。此外,低氧 CD39(-/-) 小鼠的肺 P2X1 受体明显增加。通过连续给予 apyrase 来系统重建 ATPase 和 ADPase 酶活性,可将低氧 CD39(-/-) 小鼠的肺动脉压降低至低氧 CD39(+/+) 对照组的水平。使用强效和选择性 P2X1 受体拮抗剂 NF279 进行治疗,可使肺动脉压进一步降低。我们的研究首次表明,CD39 的减少以及循环嘌呤能信号配体和同源受体的改变与肺动脉高压的病理生物学有关。重建和受体阻断实验表明,嘌呤核苷酸三磷酸和二磷酸的磷酸水解,或 P2X1 受体的阻断,可能作为肺动脉高压的治疗方法。