| Literature DB >> 35252268 |
Juliane Hannemann1,2, Rainer Böger1,2.
Abstract
The pulmonary circulation responds to hypoxia with vasoconstriction, a mechanism that helps to adapt to short-lived hypoxic episodes. When sustained, hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction (HPV) may become deleterious, causing right ventricular hypertrophy and failure, and contributing to morbidity and mortality in the late stages of several chronic pulmonary diseases. Nitric oxide (NO) is an important endothelial vasodilator. Its release is regulated, amongst other mechanisms, by the presence of endogenous inhibitors like asymmetric dimethylarginine (ADMA). Evidence has accumulated in recent years that elevated ADMA may be implicated in the pathogenesis of HPV and in its clinical sequelae, like pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). PAH is one phenotypic trait in experimental models with disrupted ADMA metabolism. In high altitude, elevation of ADMA occurs during long-term exposure to chronic or chronic intermittent hypobaric hypoxia; ADMA is significantly associated with high altitude pulmonary hypertension. High ADMA concentration was also reported in patients with chronic obstructive lung disease, obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome, and overlap syndrome, suggesting a pathophysiological role for ADMA-mediated impairment of endothelium-dependent, NO-mediated pulmonary vasodilation in these clinically relevant conditions. Improved understanding of the molecular (dys-)regulation of pathways controlling ADMA concentration may help to dissect the pathophysiology and find novel therapeutic options for these diseases.Entities:
Keywords: asymmetric dimethylarginine (ADMA); chronic obstructive lung disease (COPD); endothelium/physiopathology; high altitude; hypoxaemia; obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS)
Year: 2022 PMID: 35252268 PMCID: PMC8891573 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2022.835481
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Figure 1Schematic representation of pathways of dimethylarginine biosynthesis and metabolism. Dimethylarginines are formed during (di-)methylation of protein-bound L-arginine residues by a family of protein arginine N-methyltransferases (PRMTs). Free ADMA and SDMA are released during physiological hydrolytic protein turnover. Asymmetric dimethylarginine (ADMA) inhibits nitric oxide (NO) synthesis from L-arginine, whilst symmetric dimethylarginine (SDMA) does not directly interfere with NO synthase activity. ADMA is metabolically degraded to L-citrulline and dimethylamine by either of two isoforms of dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolase (DDAH). Both ADMA and SDMA can be cleaved by alanine glyoxylate aminotransferase-2 (AGXT2); this enzyme is the major pathway of SDMA clearance. Minor amounts of both ADMA and SDMA can also be excreted into the urine.
Figure 2Schematic representation of the pulmonary circulation in normoxia (A) and when one bronchus is obstructed and the respective alveoli are hypoventilated (B). During normoxia in the healthy state, deoxygenated blood from the pulmonary artery flows through the capillary bed surrounding the alveoli, where it takes up oxygen and, fully oxygenated, returns through the pulmonary vein to the left atrium of the heart. Local hypoventilation of an area of the lungs causes vasoconstriction of the pulmonary arteries in the same area; thus, less blood flows through the hypoventilated area and relatively more through other, better ventilated areas, resulting in a minimal reduction of the oxygenation status of the blood returning into the systemic circulation through the pulmonary vein (Euler-Liljestrand mechanism). (C) In global hypoxia, hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction occurs throughout the lung. This obviously does not improve the oxygenation status of the blood, but it causes a major increase in total pulmonary vascular resistance. When this situation is maintained for longer time periods, pulmonary hypertension may occur, resulting in right ventricular hypertrophy and failure.
Clinical conditions associated with pulmonary hypoxia.
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| High altitude pulmonary edema | Acute, extensive HPV leading to over perfusion of patent vessels with leakage of protein | Development of pulmonary edema, cyanosis, and tachycardia in unacclimatized individuals | ( |
| Chronic hypobaric hypoxia (CH) | Global HPV increases pulmonary perfusion pressure | Development of pulmonary hypertension and right ventricular hypertrophy | ( |
| Chronic intermittent hypobaric hypoxia (CIH) | Repeated adaptation to high altitude causes cycling between global HPV and phases of relief | Development of pulmonary hypertension and right ventricular hypertrophy | ( |
| Altitude training in athletes | Global hypobaric hypoxia causes HPV | HPV may impede right ventricular function and exercise performance at altitude | ( |
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| Birth | Occurrence of HPV as local homeostatic response to focal pneumonia or atelectasis | Optimization of systemic pO2 without alteration of pulmonary artery pressure | ( |
| Single-lung anesthesia | Reduction of blood flow to the non-ventilated lung | Facilitation of thoracic surgery, e.g., lung tumor resection | ( |
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| Sleep apnea syndrome | Intermittent apnea causes recurrent HPV and right ventricular failure | Development of pulmonary hypertension and right ventricular hypertrophy | ( |
| Asthma | HPV contributes to ventilation/perfusion matching in phases of acute bronchoconstriction | Maintenance of optimal oxygenation of blood | ( |
| COPD | HPV contributes to ventilation/perfusion matching, but is maintained chronically | Development of pulmonary hypertension | ( |
| Pneumonia | Diversion of blood flow away from regions of inflammatory infiltration; in chronic pneumonia, HPV is reduced | Maintenance of optimal oxygenation of blood | ( |
| Interstitial lung disease | HPV is one mechanism leading to pulmonary hypertension | Deterioration of symptoms, functional capacity, and survival | ( |
| Chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension | HPV is aggravated by NO deficiency | Vasoconstriction and vascular remodeling trigger global pulmonary small vessel disease | ( |
| Atelectasis | Diversion of blood flow away from malventilated lung area | Lessened contribution of atelectasis to right-to-left shunt and subsequent systemic hypoxaemia | ( |
| ARDS | HPV is impaired in ARDS, contributing to hypoxaemia | Development of pulmonary hypertension and right ventricular failure | ( |
| COVID-19 | Pulmonary endotheliitis may impair HPV | Exaggerated systemic hypoxaemia and organ failure | ( |
ARDS, acute respiratory distress syndrome; COPD, chronic obstructive lung disease; CH, chronic hypoxia; CIH, chronic intermittent hypoxia; HPV, hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction.
Figure 3Schematic overview of endothelium-derived vasoconstrictor and vasodilator mediators. The endothelium produces several vasoconstrictor mediators like endothelin-1 (ET-1) and thromboxane (TX) A2 as well as vasodilator mediators like nitric oxide (NO), prostacyclin (PGI2), and endothelium-derived hyperpolarizing factor (EDHF) that diffuse to the adjacent smooth muscle cells that effect changes in vascular tone upon this stimulation. For further details see text.
Experimental models linking derangement of the ADMA/DDAH pathway with pulmonary hypoxia and pulmonary vascular dysfunction.
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| 1 week of HX in rats | Exposure of adult male rats to 1 week of HX (10% O2) | 1.9-fold ↑ in eNOS protein and 37% ↓ in DDAH1 protein in lungs of HX rats; pulmonary ADMA ↑ by 2.3-fold, DDAH activity ↓ by 37% and NO ↓ by 22%, respectively | ( |
| Newborn piglets during normal postnatal development and in PPHN | Analysis of DDAH1 and DDAH2 protein and of DDAH activity in lungs | DDAH1 protein remained unchanged, whilst DDAH2 protein was ↑ after birth; in PPHN DDAH2 protein and DDAH activity were ↓ but DDAH1 protein unchanged | ( |
| CH in mice | 3 weeks of hypoxia (10% O2) | In CH: PRMT2 ↑ in alveolar type II cells; ADMA ↑ and ADMA/L-arginine ratio ↑ | ( |
| HX exposure with and without hypoxic conditioning in mice | Acute HX exposure after hypoxic (HC) or sham conditioning (SC), with or without i.p. injection of ADMA | ADMA increased HX survival time in HC and in SC mice; the effect was mediated by regulation of eNOS activity | ( |
| DDAH-1+/− mice | DDAH-1 expression, DDAH-2 expression, ADMA | Hypertension, endothelial dysfunction, right ventricular pressure | ( |
| Allergically inflamed mouse lungs | Ovalbumin sensitization, ovalbumin + L-arginine treatment, control mice | PRMT2 ↑ and DDAH2 ↓ in ovalbumin-treated mice, along with ↑ ADMA and ↑ nitrotyrosine; Reversal with oral L-arginine treatment | ( |
| Acute and chronic hypoxia in DDAH1-transgenic and WT mice | Acute (10 min) and sustained HX (3 h) in isolated perfused mouse lungs; chronic HX (4 weeks); | No change in acute HPV in DDAH1 transgenic mice vs. WT; decreased sustained HPV in DDAH1 transgenic mice vs. WT; no difference in CH-induced PAH | ( |
| Peritoneal macrophages from macrophage-specific DDAH2 k.o. and WT mice | Exposure of macrophages to HX (3% O2) followed by reoxygenation | NOx production increased in WT monocytes after HX; DDAH2 protein increased by 4.5-fold and ADMA decreased by 24% after HX; DDAH2 k.o. abolished the HX-induced changes in NOx and ADMA | ( |
| Chronic intermittent normobaric hypoxia | Diabetic and non-diabetic mice subjected to chronic intermittent normobaric hypoxia or control for 8 weeks | ↓ endothelium-dependent vasodilation and ↑ ADMA in hypoxic mice vs. controls | ( |
| CIH in rats | Exposure of Wistar rats to CIH, CH, or NX for 30 days | ↑ RVH in CIH and CH vs. NX; lung eNOS mRNA ↑ in HX groups, but NOS activity unchanged, ADMA ↑. | ( |
| CH in DDAH1-transgenic and WT mice | Exposure of WT and DDAH1-transgenic mice to HX (10% O2) for 2 weeks | ↑ RVSP and ↑ RVH as well as ↑ | ( |
| CH in DDAH1 k.o. and WT mice | Exposure of DDAH1 k.o. and WT mice to 3 weeks of CH | ADMA ↑ in WT lungs during HX; DDAH1 mRNA and protein ↓ in WT lungs; DDAH2 protein ↑ in DDAH1 k.o. lungs during HX; no difference in RVH and RVSP between genotypes | ( |
ADMA, asymmetric dimethylarginine; CH, chronic hypoxia; CIH, chronic intermittent hypoxia; DDAH, dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolase; eNOS, endothelial nitric oxide synthase; HC, hypoxic conditioning; HPV, hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction; HX, hypoxia; i.p., intraperitoneal; NX, normoxia; PRMT, protein arginine N-methyltransferase; RVH, right ventricular hypertrophy; RVSP, right ventricular systolic pressure; SC, sham conditioning; WT, wild-type.
Clinical conditions of pulmonary hypoxia in which derangement of the ADMA / DDAH pathway was described.
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| Chronic-intermittent hypobaric hypoxia | 72 healthy Chilean lowlanders exposed to CIH during 3 months; 16 Andean highlander natives | ADMA ↑ by 80 % in CIH; no change in SDMA in CIH; highest ADMA in highland natives | ( |
| Chronic-intermittent hypobaric hypoxia | 100 healthy Chilean lowlanders exposed to CIH during 6 months; echocardiography at 6 months | ADMA ↑ in CIH; SDMA ↓ in CIH; individuals with highest ADMA had highest risk of HAPH | ( |
| Chronic intermittent hypobaric hypoxia | 120 Chilean mining workers after exposure to CIH for a mean 14 ± 0.5 years | ADMA, but not SDMA, ↑ as compared to reference levels; higher ADMA in workers with HAPH (mPAP > 30 mm Hg) than in those without | ( |
| High altitude pulmonary oedema | 200 HAPE patients, 200 HAPE-free altitude sojourners, and 450 healthy highlanders | ADMA significantly ↑ in HAPE-patients and in highlanders than in HAPE-free sojourners | ( |
| Acute hypobaric hypoxia (hypobaric chamber) | 12 healthy humans during a 24 h stay in a hypobaric chamber | ( | |
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| Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome | 188 OSAS patients, 520 controls | No difference in ADMA between OSAS and controls | ( |
| Obesity | 518 obese individuals; 242 OSAS patients, 276 non-OSAS individuals | ADMA and SDMA ↑ with increasing AHI | ( |
| Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome | 95 patients with suspected OSAS undergoing polysomnography | Significant inverse linear correlation between AHI and flow-mediated vasodilation in the forearm; | ( |
| Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome | 40 OSAS patients | ADMA ↑ in OSAS vs. controls | ( |
| Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome | 13 patients with severe OSAS, | ADMA not significantly higher in severe or mild-to-moderate OSAS than in controls; ADMA significantly correlated to arousal index | ( |
| Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome | OSAS patients with ( | ADMA ↑ in OSAS, but not related to the presence of CV risk factors | ( |
| Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome | 34 OSAS patients, | ADMA ↑ and NO metabolite levels ↓ in OSAS | ( |
| Children with OSAS | 26 children with OSAS, | No significant difference in ADMA between OSAS and control children | ( |
| Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome | 10 male OSAS patients before and after CPCP therapy | Significant improvement in flow-mediated vasodilation after CPAP therapy, concomitant with ↓ ADMA | ( |
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| COPD | 29 stable COPD, 35 exacerbated COPD, 15 control smokers | Serum L-arginine/ADMA ratio ↓ in stable and exacerbated COPD; serum SDMA ↑ in COPD and decreased after systemic steroid treatment | ( |
| COPD | COPD patients with or without PAH (sPAP > 35 mm Hg), healthy controls | ADMA ↑ in COPD with PAH vs. both other groups | ( |
| COPD | 42 patients with mild to very severe COPD, with or without PAH (sPAP > 36 mm Hg) | ADMA and SDMA ↑ with decreasing FEV1, but SDMA ↓again with very low FEV1; ADMA and SDMA slightly, but not significantly higher in COPD patients with PAH | ( |
| COPD | 74 COPD patients | Significant correlation of ADMA with airway resistance in patients with poorly controlled airway obstruction; ADMA significantly associated with airway resistance in multiple linear regression ( | ( |
| Stable COPD | 60 patients with stable COPD, 20 smoking and 20 non-smoking healthy controls | Brachial artery intima-media thickness (IMT) ↑ in COPD than in controls; significant correlation of IMT with ADMA | ( |
| Exacerbated COPD | 150 patients with acute exacerbation of COPD; 6 years of prospective follow-up for total mortality | ADMA and SDMA ↑ in more severe pneumonia and with higher SOFA Score; highest quartiles of ADMA and SDMA significantly associated with all-cause mortality (54%) after 6 years | ( |
| Elderly patients with stable COPD | 41 COPD patients, 35 elderly controls | Bronchial obstruction (FEV1) associated with arterial stiffness and brachial artery flow-mediated vasodilation; no correlation with ADMA | ( |
| COPD | 58 COPD patients, 30 healthy controls | ADMA ↑ in COPD, whilst serum NOx ↓ in COPD—inverse correlation between both parameters; ADMA inversely correlated with FEV1, ADMA ↑ with progression of COPD stage | ( |
| Stable and exacerbated COPD | 32 patients with stable COPD, 12 patients with acute exacerbation of COPD, 30 healthy controls | ADMA and SDMA ↑ in COPD than controls; ADMA and SDMA ↑ in exacerbated vs. stable COPD | ( |
| Mild to moderate COPD | 43 COPD patients, 43 matched controls | Non-significant increase in ADMA in mild and moderate COPD; ADMA/arginine ratio associated with COPD severity | ( |
| COPD | 10 COPD patients | Sputum ADMA correlates with sputum L-ornithine and L-citrulline | ( |
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| COPD patients, OSAS patients, and patients with overlap syndrome (OS) | 26 patients with COPD, 25 with OSAS, and 24 with OS | ADMA ↑ in COPD vs. OSAS or OS; no change in ADMA after 30 days of CPAP treatment in OSAS and OS patients | ( |
| COPD patients, OSAS patients, and patients with overlap syndrome (OS) | 25 patients each with COPD, OSAS, or OS | ADMA ↑ in COPD vs. OSAS or overlap syndrome; no change in ADMA after 4 weeks of CPAP treatment in OS | ( |
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| Idiopathic PAH | Patients with IPAH, healthy controls | ADMA ↑ in IPAH vs. healthy controls; significant association of ADMA with right ventricular function and with mortality | ( |
| PAH in systemic sclerosis | 66 European patients with systemic sclerosis (24 with PAH, 42 without PAH), 30 age-matched healthy controls | ADMA ↑ in systemic sclerosis with PAH, not in systemic sclerosis without PAH | ( |
| PAH in connective tissue disease | 88 Chinese patients with connective tissue diseases (43 with PAH, 45 without PAH), | ADMA ↑ in connective tissue diseases with PAH, not in connective tissue diseases without PAH | ( |
| HIV-associated PAH | 214 HIV patients, of whom 85 underwent right heart catheterization for suspected PAH | ADMA ↑ in HIV patients with PAH than in those without; mPAP 14.2% higher per each 0.1 μmol/L increase in ADMA | ( |
| CTEPH | 135 CTEPH patients, 40 healthy controls | ADMA ↑ in CTEPH patients than in controls | ( |
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| Patients hospitalized with severe COVID-19 | 31 patients hospitalized with severe COVID-19 | ADMA and SDMA ↑ in COVID-19 non-survivors than in survivors; ADMA and SDMA were best predictors of in-hospital mortality of COVID-19 patients | ( |
AMS, acute mountain sickness; CIH, chronic intermittent hypoxia; COPD, chronic obstructive lung disease; CTEPH, chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension; HAPE, high altitude pulmonary edema; HAPH, high altitude pulmonary hypertension; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; iPAH, idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension; mPAP, mean pulmonary arterial pressure; OSAS, obstructive sleep apnea syndrome; PAH, pulmonary arterial hypertension; sPAP, systolic pulmonary arterial pressure.