Abstract

Pulmonary (arterial) hypertension (PH/PAH) is a life-threatening cardiopulmonary disorder. Experimental evidence suggests involvement of inflammatory and autoimmune processes in pathogenesis of PH/PAH, however the triggering and disease-promoting mechanisms remain unknown. The complement system is a key arm of innate immunity implicated in various pro-inflammatory and autoimmune diseases, yet, surprisingly little is known about the role of complement in PH/PAH pathogenesis. The preponderance of the existing data associates complement with PH/PAH via analysis of plasma and does not study the lung directly. Therefore, we aimed to resolve this by analyzing both the mechanisms of local lung-specific complement activation and the correlation of dysregulated plasma complement to clinical outcome in PAH patients. In our recent studies, reviewed herein, we show, for the first time, that immunoglobulin-driven activation of the complement cascade, specifically its alternative pathway, in the pulmonary perivascular areas, is a key mechanism initiating pro-inflammatory processes in the early stage of experimental hypoxic PH (a form of “sterile inflammation”). In human patients with end-stage PAH, we have demonstrated that perivascular deposition of immunoglobulin G (IgG) and activation of the complement cascade are “longitudinally” persistent in the disease. We also showed, using unbiased network analysis, that plasma complement signaling, including again the Alternative pathway, is a prognostic factor of survival in patients with idiopathic PAH (IPAH). Based on these initial findings, we suggest that vascular-specific, immunoglobulin-driven dysregulated complement signaling triggers and maintains pulmonary vascular remodeling and PH. Future experiments in this area would facilitate discoveries on whether complement signaling can serve both as a biomarker and therapeutic target in PH/PAH.

Highlights

  • Vascular inflammation can be associated with numerous pulmonary insults, including so-called ‘‘sterile inflammation’’, which may arise in the context of environmental stresses, including hypoxia and sheer stress, in response to damage associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) released into the extracellular environment[7]

  • Hypoxia-induced pulmonary perivascular inflammation and cell proliferation are complement-dependent First, we evaluated whether complement activation was involved in regulation of specific cellular/molecular events characteristic of the early stage of hypoxia-induced Pulmonary hypertension (PH)

  • As previous studies have suggested an important role ofimmune mechanisms in pathophysiology of PH/PAH43, we evaluated the contribution of immunoglobulins (Igs) to hypoxia-induced complement activation and vascular inflammation and remodeling

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Summary

Review article

Inflammation, immunity, and vascular remodeling in pulmonary hypertension; Evidence for complement involvement?.

INFLAMMATION IN PULMONARY VASCULAR INFLAMMATION AND REMODELING
ROLE OF COMPLEMENT IN PULMONARY VASCULAR INFLAMMATION AND REMODELING
CONCLUSIONS AND SPECULATIONS

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