Abstract

Pulmonary arterial remodeling is a crucial cause of increased pulmonary artery pressure during pulmonary hypertension (PH). Recently, growing evidence has upheld the contribution of endothelial-mesenchymal transition (EndMT) to pulmonary arterial remodeling, but the underlying mechanisms remain largely unaddressed. miR-204 has been implicated in PH, being anti-proliferative and pro-apoptotic in pulmonary artery smooth muscles cells (PASMCs), but its role in EndMT is still unknown. Here we found that miR-204 was down-regulated by hypoxia in rat pulmonary arterial intima and human pulmonary artery endothelial cells (HPAECs), and its further down-regulation by using miR-204 inhibitor suppressed hypoxia-induced EndMT. Moreover, autophagy, evoked by hypoxia in rat pulmonary arterial intima and HPAECs, suppressed hypoxia-induced EndMT via p62-dependent degradation of Snail and Twist. Additionally, autophagy was regulated by miR-204 targeting ATG7. While down-regulation of miR-204 in PASMCs reportedly promoted monocrotaline-induced pulmonary arterial hypertension via increased cell proliferation, our data suggested an important, albeit dichotomous, role of miR-204 down-regulation in endothelial cells in the process of EndMT that it attenuated EndMT by enhancing autophagy, thereby ameliorating hypoxia-induced PH to some extent.

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