Abstract

Serotonin (5‐HT) contributes to the pathogenesis of experimental neonatal pulmonary hypertension (PH) associated with bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD). Platelets are the primary source of circulating 5‐HT and is released upon platelet activation. Platelet transfusions are associated with neonatal mortality and increased rates of BPD. As BPD is often complicated by PH, we tested the hypothesis that circulating platelets are activated and also increased in the lungs of neonatal mice with bleomycin‐induced PH associated with BPD. Newborn wild‐type mice received intraperitoneal bleomycin (3 units/kg) three times weekly for 3 weeks. Platelets from mice with experimental PH exhibited increased adhesion to collagen under flow (at 300 s−1 and 1,500 s−1) and increased expression of the αIIbβ3 integrin and phosphatidylserine, markers of platelet activation. Platelet‐derived factors 5‐HT and platelet factor 4 were increased in plasma from mice with experimental PH. Pharmacologic blockade of the 5‐HT 2A receptor (5‐HT 2A R) prevents bleomycin‐induced PH and pulmonary vascular remodeling. Here, platelets from mice with bleomycin‐induced PH demonstrate increased 5‐HT 2A R expression providing further evidence of both platelet activation and increased 5‐HT signaling in this model. In addition, bleomycin treatment increased lung platelet accumulation. In summary, platelets are activated, granule factors are released, and are increased in numbers in the lungs of mice with experimental neonatal PH. These results suggest platelet activation and release of platelet‐derived factors may increase vascular tone, promote aberrant angiogenesis, and contribute to the development of neonatal PH.

Highlights

  • Pulmonary hypertension (PH) is a life-threatening condition that develops in 14%–25% of preterm infants with the lung disease of prematurity known as bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) (Bhat, Salas, Foster, Carlo, & Ambalavanan, 2012; Mourani et al, 2015)

  • We have previously shown that pharmacologic inhibition of 5-HT signaling via the 5-HT 2A receptor (5-HT 2A R) increases pulmonary blood flow in fetal sheep with PH and protects against the development of murine bleomycin-induced neonatal PH (Delaney et al, 2013, 2018)

  • We previously reported that pharmacologic blockade of the 5-HT 2A R prevents bleomycin-induced PH and pulmonary vascular remodeling (Delaney et al, 2018)

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Pulmonary hypertension (PH) is a life-threatening condition that develops in 14%–25% of preterm infants with the lung disease of prematurity known as bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) (Bhat, Salas, Foster, Carlo, & Ambalavanan, 2012; Mourani et al, 2015). Each platelet contains numerous growth factors, vasoactive mediators, chemokines, cytokines, and angiogenic agents that have been implicated in the pathogenesis of PH (Balabanian et al, 2002; Christman et al, 1992; Clave, Maeda, Thomaz, Bydlowski, & Lopes, 2019; Duncan et al, 2012; Flaumenhaft & Sharda, 2019; Hundelshausen, Petersen, & Brandt, 2007; Italiano et al, 2008; Jurasz, Ng, Granton, Courtman, & Stewart, 2010; Kawut et al, 2005; Lopes et al, 2011; Tantawy, Adly, Ismail, Habeeb, & Farouk, 2013) These factors are stored within three types of granules: alpha (PF4 (CXCL4), CXCL7, CXCL5, PDGF, TGF-ß), dense (5-HT, Ca, ADP, ATP), and lysosomal (Flaumenhaft & Sharda, 2019). Our study utilized a murine bleomycin model of PH to study the hypothesis that platelets from mice with PH circulate in an activated state and that circulating and lung platelet-derived factors, as well as the number of platelets in the lungs of neonatal mice with PH, is significantly increased

| METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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