Metabolic reprogramming and inflammation act in concert to control vascular remodeling in hypoxic pulmonary hypertension

Author:

Stenmark Kurt R.12,Tuder Rubin M.3,El Kasmi Karim C.4

Affiliation:

1. Division of Critical Care Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, University of Colorado, Anschutz Medical Campus, Denver, Colorado;

2. Cardiovascular Pulmonary Research Laboratories, Department of Medicine, University of Colorado, Anschutz Medical Campus, Denver, Colorado; and

3. Program in Translational Lung Research, Department of Medicine, Division of Pulmonary Sciences, University of Colorado, Anschutz Medical Campus, Denver, Colorado

4. Division of Gastroenterology, Department of Pediatrics, University of Colorado, Anschutz Medical Campus, Denver, Colorado;

Abstract

Pulmonary hypertension (PH) is a complex, multifactorial syndrome that remains poorly understood despite decades of research. PH is characterized by profound pulmonary artery (PA) remodeling that includes significant fibro-proliferative and inflammatory changes of the PA adventitia. In line with the emerging concept that PH shares key features with cancer, recent work centers on the idea that PH results from a multistep process driven by reprogramming of gene-expression patterns that govern changes in cell metabolism, inflammation, and proliferation. Data demonstrate that in addition to PA endothelial cells and smooth muscle cells, adventitial fibroblasts from animals with experimental hypoxic PH and from humans with PH (hereafter, termed PH-Fibs) exhibit proinflammatory activation, increased proliferation, and apoptosis resistance, all in the context of metabolic reprogramming to aerobic glycolysis. PH-Fibs can also recruit, retain, and activate naïve macrophages (Mϕ) toward a proinflammatory/proremodeling phenotype through secretion of chemokines, cytokines, and glycolytic metabolites, among which IL-6 and lactate play key roles. Furthermore, these fibroblast-activated Mϕ (hereafter, termed FAMϕ) exhibit aerobic glycolysis together with high expression of arginase 1, Vegfa, and I1lb, all of which require hypoxia-inducible factor 1α and STAT3 signaling. Strikingly, in situ, the adventitial Mϕ phenotype in the remodeled PA closely resembles the Mϕ phenotype induced by fibroblasts in vitro (FAMϕ), suggesting that FAMϕ crosstalk involving metabolic and inflammatory signals is a critical, pathogenetic component of vascular remodeling. This review discusses metabolic and inflammatory changes in fibroblasts and Mϕ in PH with the goal of raising ideas about new interventions to abrogate remodeling in hypoxic forms of PH.

Funder

NIH/NHLBI

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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