Department of Medicine, Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care, Sleep and Occupational Medicine, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana.
Department of Anesthesiology, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana.
Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol. 2020 Sep 1;319(3):L456-L470. doi: 10.1152/ajplung.00487.2019. Epub 2020 Jul 8.
Mechanisms driving adaptive developmental responses to chronic high-altitude (HA) exposure are incompletely known. We developed a novel rat model mimicking the human condition of cardiopulmonary adaptation to HA starting at conception and spanning the in utero and postnatal timeframe. We assessed lung growth and cardiopulmonary structure and function and performed transcriptome analyses to identify mechanisms facilitating developmental adaptations to chronic hypoxia. To generate the model, breeding pairs of Sprague-Dawley rats were exposed to hypobaric hypoxia (equivalent to 9,000 ft elevation). Mating, pregnancy, and delivery occurred in hypoxic conditions. Six weeks postpartum, structural and functional data were collected in the offspring. RNA-Seq was performed on right ventricle (RV) and lung tissue. Age-matched breeding pairs and offspring under room air (RA) conditions served as controls. Hypoxic rats exhibited significantly lower body weights and higher hematocrit levels, alveolar volumes, pulmonary diffusion capacities, RV mass, and RV systolic pressure, as well as increased pulmonary artery remodeling. RNA-Seq analyses revealed multiple differentially expressed genes in lungs and RVs from hypoxic rats. Although there was considerable similarity between hypoxic lungs and RVs compared with RA controls, several upstream regulators unique to lung or RV were identified. We noted a pattern of immune downregulation and regulation patterns of immune and hormonal mediators similar to the genome from patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension. In summary, we developed a novel murine model of chronic hypoxia exposure that demonstrates functional and structural phenotypes similar to human adaptation. We identified transcriptomic alterations that suggest potential mechanisms for adaptation to chronic HA.
目前尚不完全清楚导致慢性高海拔(HA)暴露适应性发育反应的机制。我们开发了一种新型大鼠模型,模拟了从受孕开始并跨越宫内和产后时间框架的人类心肺对 HA 适应的情况。我们评估了肺生长和心肺结构与功能,并进行了转录组分析,以确定促进慢性低氧适应发育的机制。为了生成该模型,将 Sprague-Dawley 大鼠的繁殖对暴露于低压缺氧(相当于 9000 英尺海拔)中。交配、怀孕和分娩均在缺氧条件下进行。产后 6 周,收集后代的结构和功能数据。对右心室(RV)和肺组织进行 RNA-Seq 分析。年龄匹配的繁殖对和在常氧(RA)条件下的后代作为对照。缺氧大鼠的体重明显较低,且红细胞压积水平、肺泡体积、肺扩散能力、RV 质量和 RV 收缩压较高,肺动脉重塑增加。RNA-Seq 分析显示,缺氧大鼠的肺和 RV 中有多个差异表达基因。尽管与 RA 对照相比,缺氧肺和 RV 之间具有相当大的相似性,但也鉴定出了几个仅在肺或 RV 中具有独特的上游调节剂。我们注意到免疫下调的模式以及与肺动脉高压患者基因组相似的免疫和激素介质的调节模式。总之,我们开发了一种新型慢性低氧暴露的小鼠模型,该模型表现出与人类适应相似的功能和结构表型。我们确定了转录组改变,这些改变表明了对慢性 HA 适应的潜在机制。