Umbilical cord blood exosomes from very preterm infants with bronchopulmonary dysplasia aggravate lung injury in mice

Author:

Zhong Xin-qi,Hao Tao-fang,Zhu Qi-jiong,Zheng Jing,Zheng Mao-fei,Li Xiu-hong,Luo Li-hua,Xia Chang-shun,Fan Yu-wei,Gu Jian,Liu Tao,Chen Dun-jin

Abstract

AbstractBronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) is characterized by abnormal development of the blood vessels and alveoli in lungs, which largely occurs in premature infants. Exosomes (EXO) from very preterm infants (VPI) with BPD (BPD-EXO) impair angiogenic activities of human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) via EXO-miRNAs cargo. This study aimed to determine whether and how BPD-EXO affect the development of BPD in a mouse model. We showed that treating BPD mice with BPD-EXO chronically and irreversibly aggravated lung injury. BPD-EXO up-regulated 139 and down-regulated 735 genes in the mouse lung tissue. These differentially expressed genes were enriched to the MAPK pathway (e.g., Fgf9 and Cacna2d3), which is critical to angiogenesis and vascular remodeling. BPD-EXO suppressed expression of Fgf9 and Cacna2d3 in HUVECs and inhibited migration, tube formation, and increased cell apoptosis in HUVECs. These data demonstrate that BPD-EXO aggravate lung injury in BPD mice and impair lung angiogenesis, plausibly leading to adverse outcomes of VPI with BPD. These data also suggest that BPD-EXO could serve as promising targets for predicting and treating BPD.

Funder

the Natural Science Fund of Guangdong Province

the basic and applied research project of Guangzhou Science and Technology Bureau

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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