3D Imaging Reveals Complex Microvascular Remodeling in the Right Ventricle in Pulmonary Hypertension

Author:

Ichimura Kenzo123ORCID,Boehm Mario1,Andruska Adam M.13ORCID,Zhang Fan3ORCID,Schimmel Katharina123ORCID,Bonham Spencer4ORCID,Kabiri Angela4,Kheyfets Vitaly O.5ORCID,Ichimura Shoko6,Reddy Sushma26ORCID,Mao Yuqiang1,Zhang Tianyi1,Wang Gordon X.7,Santana Everton J.8ORCID,Tian Xuefei1,Essafri Ilham5,Vinh Ryan19ORCID,Tian Wen19,Nicolls Mark R.1239ORCID,Yajima Shin24ORCID,Shudo Yasuhiro24ORCID,MacArthur John W.24ORCID,Woo Y. Joseph24ORCID,Metzger Ross J.63ORCID,Spiekerkoetter Edda123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, Division of Pulmonary, Allergy and Critical Care (K.I., M.B., A.M.A., K.S., Y.M., T.Z., X.T., R.V., W.T., M.R.N., E.S.)

2. Cardiovascular Institute (K.I., K.S., S.R., M.R.N., S.Y., Y.S., J.W.M., Y.J.W., E.S.).

3. Vera Moulton Wall Center for Pulmonary Vascular Disease, Stanford School of Medicine (K.I., A.M.A., F.Z., K.S., M.R.N., R.J.M., E.S.).

4. Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery (S.B., A.K., S.Y., Y.S., J.W.M., Y.J.W.)

5. Pediatric Critical Care Medicine, Developmental Lung Biology and CVP Research Laboratories, School of Medicine, University of Colorado (V.O.K., I.E.)

6. Department of Pediatrics, Division of Cardiology (S.I., S.R., R.J.M.).

7. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences (G.X.W.), Stanford University.

8. Department of Medicine, Division of Cardiovascular Medicine (E.J.S.), Stanford University.

9. VA Palo Alto Health Care System (R.V., W.T., M.R.N.).

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Pathogenic concepts of right ventricular (RV) failure in pulmonary arterial hypertension focus on a critical loss of microvasculature. However, the methods underpinning prior studies did not take into account the 3-dimensional (3D) aspects of cardiac tissue, making accurate quantification difficult. We applied deep-tissue imaging to the pressure-overloaded RV to uncover the 3D properties of the microvascular network and determine whether deficient microvascular adaptation contributes to RV failure. METHODS: Heart sections measuring 250-µm-thick were obtained from mice after pulmonary artery banding (PAB) or debanding PAB surgery and properties of the RV microvascular network were assessed using 3D imaging and quantification. Human heart tissues harvested at the time of transplantation from pulmonary arterial hypertension cases were compared with tissues from control cases with normal RV function. RESULTS: Longitudinal 3D assessment of PAB mouse hearts uncovered complex microvascular remodeling characterized by tortuous, shorter, thicker, highly branched vessels, and overall preserved microvascular density. This remodeling process was reversible in debanding PAB mice in which the RV function recovers over time. The remodeled microvasculature tightly wrapped around the hypertrophied cardiomyocytes to maintain a stable contact surface to cardiomyocytes as an adaptation to RV pressure overload, even in end-stage RV failure. However, microvasculature-cardiomyocyte contact was impaired in areas with interstitial fibrosis where cardiomyocytes displayed signs of hypoxia. Similar to PAB animals, microvascular density in the RV was preserved in patients with end-stage pulmonary arterial hypertension, and microvascular architectural changes appeared to vary by etiology, with patients with pulmonary veno-occlusive disease displaying a lack of microvascular complexity with uniformly short segments. CONCLUSIONS: 3D deep tissue imaging of the failing RV in PAB mice, pulmonary hypertension rats, and patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension reveals complex microvascular changes to preserve the microvascular density and maintain a stable microvascular-cardiomyocyte contact. Our studies provide a novel framework to understand microvascular adaptation in the pressure-overloaded RV that focuses on cell-cell interaction and goes beyond the concept of capillary rarefaction.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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