Relationship between impaired BMP signalling and clinical risk factors at early-stage vascular injury in the preterm infant

Author:

Heydarian MotaharehsadatORCID,Oak Prajakta,Zhang Xin,Kamgari Nona,Kindt Alida,Koschlig Markus,Pritzke Tina,Gonzalez-Rodriguez Erika,Förster KaiORCID,Morty Rory E,Häfner Friederike,Hübener Christoph,Flemmer Andreas W,Yildirim Ali OenderORCID,Sudheendra Deepti,Tian Xuefei,Petrera Agnese,Kirsten Holger,Ahnert Peter,Morrell Nick,Desai Tushar J,Sucre Jennifer,Spiekerkoetter Edda,Hilgendorff Anne

Abstract

IntroductionChronic lung disease, that is, bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) is the most common complication in preterm infants and develops as a consequence of the misguided formation of the gas-exchange area undergoing prenatal and postnatal injury. Subsequent vascular disease and its progression into pulmonary arterial hypertension critically determines long-term outcome in the BPD infant but lacks identification of early, disease-defining changes.MethodsWe link impaired bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) signalling to the earliest onset of vascular pathology in the human preterm lung and delineate the specific effects of the most prevalent prenatal and postnatal clinical risk factors for lung injury mimicking clinically relevant conditions in a multilayered animal model using wild-type and transgenic neonatal mice.ResultsWe demonstrate (1) the significant reduction in BMP receptor 2 (BMPR2) expression at the onset of vascular pathology in the lung of preterm infants, later mirrored by reduced plasma BMP protein levels in infants with developing BPD, (2) the rapid impairment (and persistent change) of BMPR2 signalling on postnatal exposure to hyperoxia and mechanical ventilation, aggravated by prenatal cigarette smoke in a preclinical mouse model and (3) a link to defective alveolar septation and matrix remodelling through platelet derived growth factor-receptor alpha deficiency. In a treatment approach, we partially reversed vascular pathology by BMPR2-targeted treatment with FK506 in vitro and in vivo.ConclusionWe identified impaired BMP signalling as a hallmark of early vascular disease in the injured neonatal lung while outlining its promising potential as a future biomarker or therapeutic target in this growing, high-risk patient population.

Funder

International Research Group ‘Role of BMP signaling’

Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung

Helmholtz Foundation

Research Training Group Targets in Toxicology

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine

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1. Pulmonary phenotypes of bronchopulmonary dysplasia in the preterm infant;Seminars in Perinatology;2023-10

2. Prenatal vitamin D supplementation mitigates inflammation-related alveolar remodeling in neonatal mice;American Journal of Physiology-Lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology;2023-08-01

3. Monocyte signature as a predictor of chronic lung disease in the preterm infant;Frontiers in Immunology;2023-04-05

4. Pericytes: The lung-forgotten cell type;Frontiers in Physiology;2023-03-23

5. Complex roles of TGF-β signaling pathways in lung development and bronchopulmonary dysplasia;American Journal of Physiology-Lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology;2023-03-01

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