Classical dendritic cells contribute to hypoxia‐induced pulmonary hypertension

Author:

Mickael Claudia12ORCID,Sanders Linda A.12ORCID,Lee Michael H.34ORCID,Kumar Rahul34ORCID,Fonseca‐Balladares Dara34ORCID,Gandjeva Aneta2ORCID,Cautivo‐Reyes Kelly56ORCID,Kassa Biruk34ORCID,Kumar Sushil2ORCID,Irwin David2ORCID,Swindle Delaney2ORCID,Phang Tzu7ORCID,Stearman Robert S.8ORCID,Molofsky Ari B.5ORCID,McKee Amy S.910,Stenmark Kurt R.2ORCID,Graham Brian B.34ORCID,Tuder Rubin M.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, Division of Pulmonary Sciences and Critical Care Medicine University of Colorado Aurora Colorado USA

2. Cardiovascular Research Laboratories University of Colorado Aurora Colorado USA

3. Department of Medicine University of California San Francisco San Francisco California USA

4. Lung Biology Center Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital San Francisco California USA

5. Department of Laboratory Medicine University of California San Francisco San Francisco California USA

6. Gilead Sciences Foster City California USA

7. Section of Hematology, Oncology, and Bone Marrow Transplantation‐Cellular Therapeutics (BMT‐CT), Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine University of Colorado Aurora Colorado USA

8. Department of Medicine, Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care, Sleep, and Occupational Medicine Indiana University School of Medicine Indianapolis Indiana USA

9. Department of Medicine, Division of Clinical Immunology University of Colorado Aurora Colorado USA

10. Department of Microbiology and Immunology and ClinImmune Cell and Gene Therapy University of Colorado Aurora Colorado USA

Abstract

AbstractPulmonary hypertension (PH) is a chronic and progressive disease with significant morbidity and mortality. It is characterized by remodeled pulmonary vessels associated with perivascular and intravascular accumulation of inflammatory cells. Although there is compelling evidence that bone marrow‐derived cells, such as macrophages and T cells, cluster in the vicinity of pulmonary vascular lesions in humans and contribute to PH development in different animal models, the role of dendritic cells in PH is less clear. Dendritic cells' involvement in PH is likely since they are responsible for coordinating innate and adaptive immune responses. We hypothesized that dendritic cells drive hypoxic PH. We demonstrate that a classical dendritic cell (cDC) subset (cDC2) is increased and activated in wild‐type mouse lungs after hypoxia exposure. We observe significant protection after the depletion of cDCs in ZBTB46 DTR chimera mice before hypoxia exposure and after established hypoxic PH. In addition, we find that cDC depletion is associated with a reduced number of two macrophage subsets in the lung (FolR2+ MHCII+ CCR2+ and FolR2+ MHCII+ CCR2). We found that depleting cDC2s, but not cDC1s, was protective against hypoxic PH. Finally, proof‐of‐concept studies in human lungs show increased perivascular cDC2s in patients with Idiopathic Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension (IPAH). Our data points to an essential role of cDCs, particularly cDC2s, in the pathophysiology of experimental PH.

Funder

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

U.S. Department of Defense

American Heart Association

American Thoracic Society

Cardiovascular Medical Research and Education Fund

United Therapeutics Corporation

Publisher

Wiley

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