Abstract
Background: Hypoxic pulmonary hypertension (HPH) is one of the important pathophysiological changes in chronic pulmonary heart disease. Hypoxia promotes the phenotypic transformation of pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells (PASMCs). Extracellular exosomes regulate vascular smooth muscle cell (VSMC) phenotypic switch. Aim: Given the importance of exosomes and alveolar epithelial cells (AECs) in HPH, the present study aimed to address the issue of whether AEC-derived exosomes promote HPH by triggering PASMC phenotypic switch. Methods: Cell Counting Kit-8 (CCK-8), TRITC-phalloidin staining, and Western blotting were used to examine the effects of AEC-derived exosomes on cell proliferation, intracellular actin backbone distribution, and expression of phenotypic marker proteins in PASMCs. Transcriptomics sequencing was used to analyze differentially expressed genes (DEGs) between groups. Results: Hypoxia-induced exosomes (H-exos) could promote the proliferation of PASMCs, cause the reduction of cellular actin microfilaments, promote the expression of synthetic marker proteins (ELN and OPN), reduce the expression of contractile phenotypic marker proteins (SM22-α and α-SMA), and induce the phenotypic transformation of PASMCs. Transcriptomics sequencing analysis showed that the Rap1 signaling pathway was involved in the phenotypic transformation of PASMCs induced by H-exos. Conclusion: The present study identified that hypoxia-induced AEC-derived exosomes promote the phenotypic transformation of PASMCs and its mechanism is related to the Rap1 signaling pathway.
Published Version
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