Pulmonary vascular disease in mice xenografted with human BM progenitors from patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension

Author:

Asosingh Kewal1,Farha Samar1,Lichtin Alan2,Graham Brian3,George Deepa1,Aldred Micheala4,Hazen Stanley L.356,Loyd James7,Tuder Rubin8,Erzurum Serpil C.1

Affiliation:

1. Pathobiology, Lerner Research Institute and Respiratory Institute,

2. Taussig Cancer Institute, Hematologic Oncology and Blood Disorders,

3. Genomic Medicine Institute;

4. Department of Cell Biology,

5. Center for Cardiovascular Diagnostics and Prevention, and

6. Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH;

7. Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN; and

8. Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, University of Colorado-Denver School of Medicine, Denver, CO

Abstract

AbstractHematopoietic myeloid progenitors released into the circulation are able to promote vascular remodeling through endothelium activation and injury. Endothelial injury is central to the development of pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), a proliferative vasculopathy of the pulmonary circulation, but the origin of vascular injury is unknown. In the present study, mice transplanted with BM-derived CD133+ progenitor cells from patients with PAH, but not from healthy controls, exhibited morbidity and/or death due to features of PAH: in situ thrombi and endothelial injury, angioproliferative remodeling, and right ventricular hypertrophy and failure. Myeloid progenitors from patients with heritable and/or idiopathic PAH all produced disease in xenografted mice. Analyses of hematopoietic transcription factors and colony formation revealed underlying abnormalities of progenitors that skewed differentiation toward the myeloid-erythroid lineage. The results of the present study suggest a causal role for hematopoietic stem cell abnormalities in vascular injury, right ventricular hypertrophy, and morbidity associated with PAH.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry

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