| Literature DB >> 33230951 |
Qiang Lyu1, Yungang Bai1, Jiuhua Cheng1, Huan Liu1, Shaohua Li1, Jing Yang1, Zhongchao Wang1, Yan Ma1, Min Jiang1, Dong Dong1, Yiquan Yan1, Qixin Shi1, Xinling Ren2, Jin Ma1.
Abstract
High-altitude pulmonary hypertension (HAPH) is a severe and progressive disease caused by chronic hypoxia and subsequent pulmonary vascular remodeling. No cure is currently available owing to an incomplete understanding about vascular remodeling. It is believed that hypoxia-induced diseases can be prevented by treating hypoxia. Thus, this study aimed to determine whether daily short-duration reoxygenation at sea level attenuates pulmonary hypertension under high-altitude hypoxia. To this end, a simulated 5000-m hypoxia rat model and hypoxic cultured human pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells were used to evaluate the effect of short-duration reoxygenation. Results show that intermittent, not continuous, short-duration reoxygenation effectively attenuates hypoxia-induced pulmonary hypertension. The mechanisms underlining the protective effects involved that intermittent, short-duration reoxygenation prevented functional and structural remodeling of pulmonary arteries and proliferation, migration, and phenotypic conversion of pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells under hypoxia. The specific genes or potential molecular pathways responsible for mediating the protective effects were also characterised by RNA sequencing. Further, the frequency and the total time of intermittent reoxygenation affected its preventive effect of HAPH, which was likely attributable to augmented oxidative stress. Hence, daily intermittent, not continuous, short-duration reoxygenation partially prevented pulmonary hypertension induced by 5000-m hypoxia in rats. This study is novel in revealing a new potential method in preventing HAPH. It gives insights into the selection and optimisation of oxygen supply schemes in high-altitude areas.Entities:
Keywords: artery remodeling; high-altitude pulmonary hypertension; human pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells; intermittent reoxygenation
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33230951 DOI: 10.1096/fj.202000533RR
Source DB: PubMed Journal: FASEB J ISSN: 0892-6638 Impact factor: 5.191