Targeted expression of heme oxygenase-1 prevents the pulmonary inflammatory and vascular responses to hypoxia

  1. Tohru Minamino*,
  2. Helen Christou*,
  3. Chung-Ming Hsieh,
  4. Yuxiang Liu*,
  5. Vijender Dhawan*,
  6. Nader G. Abraham,
  7. Mark A. Perrella,§,
  8. S. Alex Mitsialis*, and
  9. Stella Kourembanas*,
  1. *Department of Medicine, Division of Newborn Medicine, Children's Hospital and Department of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115; Program of Developmental Cardiovascular Biology, the Cardiovascular Division and the §Pulmonary and Critical Care Division, Brigham & Women's Hospital, Boston, MA 02115; and Department of Pharmacology, New York Medical College, Valhalla, NY 10595
  1. Communicated by Mary Ellen Avery, Children's Hospital, Boston, MA (received for review April 12, 2001)

Abstract

Chronic hypoxia causes pulmonary hypertension with smooth muscle cell proliferation and matrix deposition in the wall of the pulmonary arterioles. We demonstrate here that hypoxia also induces a pronounced inflammation in the lung before the structural changes of the vessel wall. The proinflammatory action of hypoxia is mediated by the induction of distinct cytokines and chemokines and is independent of tumor necrosis factor-α signaling. We have previously proposed a crucial role for heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) in protecting cardiomyocytes from hypoxic stress, and potent anti-inflammatory properties of HO-1 have been reported in models of tissue injury. We thus established transgenic mice that constitutively express HO-1 in the lung and exposed them to chronic hypoxia. HO-1 transgenic mice were protected from the development of both pulmonary inflammation as well as hypertension and vessel wall hypertrophy induced by hypoxia. Significantly, the hypoxic induction of proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines was suppressed in HO-1 transgenic mice. Our findings suggest an important protective function of enzymatic products of HO-1 activity as inhibitors of hypoxia-induced vasoconstrictive and proinflammatory pathways.

Footnotes

  • To whom reprint requests should be addressed. E-mail: stella.kourembanas{at}tch.harvard.edu.

  • Abbreviations:
    HO,
    heme oxygenase;
    RVH,
    right ventricular hypertrophy;
    RVSP,
    right ventricular systolic pressure;
    VSMC,
    vascular smooth muscle cell;
    BAL,
    bronchoalveolar lavage;
    MCP,
    monocyte chemoattractant protein;
    TNF,
    tumor necrosis factor
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