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Query: UMLS:C0242706 (
hyperoxia
)
5,219
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hyperoxic acute lung injury (HALI) is characterized by a cell death response with features of apoptosis and necrosis that is inhibited by IL-11 and other interventions. We hypothesized that Bfl-1/A1, an antiapoptotic Bcl-2 protein, is a critical regulator of HALI and a mediator of IL-11-induced cytoprotection. To test this, we characterized the expression of A1 and the oxygen susceptibility of WT and IL-11 Tg(+) mice with normal and null A1 loci. In WT mice, 100% O(2) caused TUNEL(+) cell death, induction and activation of intrinsic and mitochondrial-death pathways, and alveolar protein leak. Bcl-2 and Bcl-xl were also induced as an apparent protective response. A1 was induced in
hyperoxia
, and in A1-null mice, the toxic effects of
hyperoxia
were exaggerated, Bcl-2 and Bcl-xl were not induced, and premature death was seen. In contrast, IL-11 stimulated A1, diminished the toxic effects of
hyperoxia
, stimulated Bcl-2 and Bcl-xl, and enhanced murine survival in 100% O(2). In A1-null mice, IL-11-induced protection, survival advantage, and Bcl-2 and Bcl-xl induction were significantly decreased.
VEGF
also conferred protection via an A1-dependent mechanism. In vitro
hyperoxia
also stimulated A1, and A1 overexpression inhibited oxidant-induced epithelial cell apoptosis and necrosis. A1 is an important regulator of oxidant-induced lung injury, apoptosis, necrosis, and Bcl-2 and Bcl-xl gene expression and a critical mediator of IL-11- and
VEGF
-induced cytoprotection.
...
PMID:Bcl-2-related protein A1 is an endogenous and cytokine-stimulated mediator of cytoprotection in hyperoxic acute lung injury. 1584 Nov 70
VEGF
signaling inhibition decreases alveolar and vessel growth in the developing lung, suggesting that impaired
VEGF
signaling may contribute to decreased lung growth in bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD). Whether
VEGF
treatment improves lung structure in experimental models of BPD is unknown. The objective was to determine whether
VEGF
treatment enhances alveolarization in infant rats after
hyperoxia
. Two-day-old Sprague-Dawley rats were placed into
hyperoxia
or room air (RA) for 12 days. At 14 days, rats received daily treatment with rhVEGF-165 or saline. On day 22, rats were killed. Tissue was collected. Morphometrics was assessed by radial alveolar counts (RAC), mean linear intercepts (MLI), and skeletonization. Compared with RA controls,
hyperoxia
decreased RAC (6.1 +/- 0.4 vs. 11.3 +/- 0.4, P < 0.0001), increased MLI (59.2 +/- 1.8 vs. 44.0 +/- 0.8, P < 0.0001), decreased nodal point density (447 +/- 14 vs. 503 +/- 12, P < 0.0004), and decreased vessel density (11.7 +/- 0.3 vs. 18.9 +/- 0.3, P < 0.001), which persisted despite RA recovery. Compared with hyperoxic controls, rhVEGF treatment after
hyperoxia
increased RAC (11.8 +/- 0.5, P < 0.0001), decreased MLI (42.2 +/- 1.2, P < 0.0001), increased nodal point density (502 +/- 7, P < 0.0005), and increased vessel density (23.2 +/- 0.4, P < 0.001). Exposure of neonatal rats to
hyperoxia
impairs alveolarization and vessel density, which persists despite RA recovery. rhVEGF treatment during recovery enhanced vessel growth and alveolarization. We speculate that lung structure abnormalities after
hyperoxia
may be partly due to impaired
VEGF
signaling.
...
PMID:Recombinant human VEGF treatment enhances alveolarization after hyperoxic lung injury in neonatal rats. 1590 74
Pericyte loss and capillary regression are characteristic for incipient diabetic retinopathy. Pericyte recruitment is involved in vessel maturation, and ligand-receptor systems contributing to pericyte recruitment are survival factors for endothelial cells in pericyte-free in vitro systems. We studied pericyte recruitment in relation to the susceptibility toward
hyperoxia
-induced vascular remodeling using the pericyte reporter X-LacZ mouse and the mouse model of retinopathy of prematurity (ROP). Pericytes were found in close proximity to vessels, both during formation of the superficial and the deep capillary layers. When exposure of mice to the ROP was delayed by 24 h, i.e., after the deep retinal layer had formed [at postnatal (p) day 8], preretinal neovascularizations were substantially diminished at p18. Mice with a delayed ROP exposure had 50% reduced avascular zones. Formation of the deep capillary layers at p8 was associated with a combined up-regulation of angiopoietin-1 and PDGF-B, while
VEGF
was almost unchanged during the transition from a susceptible to a resistant capillary network. Inhibition of Tie-2 function either by soluble Tie-2 or by a sulindac analog, an inhibitor of Tie-2 phosphorylation, resensitized retinal vessels to neovascularizations due to a reduction of the deep capillary network. Inhibition of Tie-2 function had no effect on pericyte recruitment. Our data indicate that the final maturation of the retinal vasculature and its resistance to regressive signals such as
hyperoxia
depend on the completion of the multilayer structure, in particular the deep capillary layers, and are independent of the coverage by pericytes.
...
PMID:Endothelial survival factors and spatial completion, but not pericyte coverage of retinal capillaries determine vessel plasticity. 1621 10
Cytokines are peptides that are produced by virtually every nucleated cell type in the body, possess overlapping biological activities, exert different effects at different concentrations, can either synergize or antagonize the effects of other cytokines, are regulated in a complex manner, and function via cytokine cascades.
Hyperoxia
-induced acute lung injury (HALI) is characterized by an influx of inflammatory cells, increased pulmonary permeability, and endothelial and epithelial cell injury/death. Some of these effects are orchestrated by cytokines. There are significant differences in the response of the developing versus the adult lung to
hyperoxia
. We review here cytokines (and select growth factors) that are involved in tolerance toward HALI in animal models. Increased cytokine expression and release have a cascade effect in HALI. IL-1 precedes the increase in IL-6 and CINC-1/IL-8 and this seems to predate the influx of inflammatory cells. Inflammatory cells in the alveolar space amplify the lung damage. Other cytokines that are primarily involved in this inflammatory response include IFN-gamma, MCP-1, and MIP-2. Certain cytokines (and growth factors) seem to ameliorate HALI by affecting cell death pathways. These include GM-CSF, KGF, IL-11, IL-13, and
VEGF
. There are significant differences in the type and temporal sequence of cytokine expression and release in the adult and newborn lung in response to
hyperoxia
. The newborn lung is greatly resistant to
hyperoxia
compared to the adult. The delayed increase in lung IL-1 and IL-6 in the newborn could induce protective factors that would help in the resolution of
hyperoxia
-induced injury. Designing a therapeutic approach to counteract oxygen toxicity in the adult and immature lung first needs understanding of the unique responses in each scenario.
...
PMID:Cytokines in tolerance to hyperoxia-induced injury in the developing and adult lung. 1678 48
Recent studies suggest that
VEGF
may worsen pulmonary edema during acute lung injury (ALI), but, paradoxically, impaired
VEGF
signaling contributes to decreased lung growth during recovery from ALI due to neonatal
hyperoxia
. To examine the diverse roles of
VEGF
in the pathogenesis of and recovery from
hyperoxia
-induced ALI, we hypothesized that exogenous recombinant human
VEGF
(rhVEGF) treatment during early neonatal hyperoxic lung injury may increase pulmonary edema but would improve late lung structure during recovery. Sprague-Dawley rat pups were placed in a
hyperoxia
chamber (inspired O(2) fraction 0.9) for postnatal days 2-14. Pups were randomized to daily intramuscular injections of rhVEGF(165) (20 microg/kg) or saline (controls). On postnatal day 14, rats were placed in room air for a 7-day recovery period. At postnatal days 3, 14, and 21, rats were killed for studies, which included body weight and wet-to-dry lung weight ratio, morphometric analysis [including radial alveolar counts (RAC), mean linear intercepts (MLI), and vessel density], and lung endothelial NO synthase (eNOS) protein content by Western blot analysis. Compared with room air controls,
hyperoxia
increased pulmonary edema by histology and wet-to-dry lung weight ratios at postnatal day 3, which resolved by day 14. Although treatment with rhVEGF did not increase edema in control rats, rhVEGF increased wet-to-dry weight ratios in
hyperoxia
-exposed rats at postnatal days 3 and 14 (P < 0.01). Compared with room air controls,
hyperoxia
decreased RAC and increased MLI at postnatal days 14 and 21. Treatment with
VEGF
resulted in increased RAC by 181% and decreased MLI by 55% on postnatal day 14 in the
hyperoxia
group (P < 0.01). On postnatal day 21, RAC was increased by 176% and MLI was decreased by 58% in the
hyperoxia
group treated with
VEGF
. rhVEGF treatment during
hyperoxia
increased eNOS protein on postnatal day 3 by threefold (P < 0.05). We conclude that rhVEGF treatment during
hyperoxia
-induced ALI transiently increases pulmonary edema but improves lung structure during late recovery. We speculate that
VEGF
has diverse roles in
hyperoxia
-induced neonatal lung injury, contributing to lung edema during the acute stage of ALI but promoting repair of the lung during recovery.
...
PMID:Recombinant human VEGF treatment transiently increases lung edema but enhances lung structure after neonatal hyperoxia. 1682 29
Developmentally important genes have recently been linked to tissue regeneration and epithelial cell repair in neonatal and adult animals in several organs, including liver, skin, prostate, and musculature. We hypothesized that developmentally important genes play roles in lung injury repair in adult mice. Although there is considerable information known about these processes, the specific molecular pathways that mediate injury and regulate tissue repair are not fully elucidated. Using a hyperoxic injury model to study these mechanisms of lung injury and tissue repair, we selected the following genes based upon their known or putative roles in lung development and organogenesis: TTF-1, FGF9, FGF10, BMP4, PDGF-A,
VEGF
, Ptc, Shh, Sca-1, BCRP, CD45, and Cyclin-D2. Our findings demonstrate that several developmentally important genes (Sca-1, Shh, PDGF-A,
VEGF
, BCRP, CD45, BMP4, and Cyclin-D2) change during hyperoxic injury and normoxic recovery in mice, suggesting that adult lung may reactivate key developmental regulatory pathways for tissue repair. The mRNA for one gene (TTF-1), unchanged during
hyperoxia
, was upregulated late in recovery phase. These novel findings provide the basis for testing the efficacy of post-injury lung repair in animals genetically modified to inactivate or express individual molecules.
...
PMID:Key developmental regulators change during hyperoxia-induced injury and recovery in adult mouse lung. 1716 88
Hyperoxia
disrupts vascular and alveolar growth of the developing lung and contributes to the development of bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD). Endothelial progenitor cells (EPC) have been implicated in repair of the vasculature, but their role in lung vascular development is unknown. Since disruption of vascular growth impairs lung structure, we hypothesized that neonatal
hyperoxia
impairs EPC mobilization and homing to the lung, contributing to abnormalities in lung structure. Neonatal mice (1-day-old) were exposed to 80% O(2) at Denver's altitude (= 65% at sea level) or room air for 10 days. Adult mice were also exposed for comparison. Blood, lung, and bone marrow were harvested after
hyperoxia
.
Hyperoxia
decreased pulmonary vascular density by 72% in neonatal but not adult mice. In contrast to the adult,
hyperoxia
simplified distal lung structure neonatal mice. Moderate
hyperoxia
reduced EPCs (CD45-/Sca-1+/CD133+/VEGFR-2+) in the blood (55%; P < 0.03), bone marrow (48%; P < 0.01), and lungs (66%; P < 0.01) of neonatal mice. EPCs increased in bone marrow (2.5-fold; P < 0.01) and lungs (2-fold; P < 0.03) of
hyperoxia
-exposed adult mice.
VEGF
, nitric oxide (NO), and erythropoietin (Epo) contribute to mobilization and homing of EPCs. Lung
VEGF
,
VEGF
receptor-2, endothelial NO synthase, and Epo receptor expression were reduced by
hyperoxia
in neonatal but not adult mice. We conclude that moderate
hyperoxia
decreases vessel density, impairs lung structure, and reduces EPCs in the circulation, bone marrow, and lung of neonatal mice but increases EPCs in adults. This developmental difference may contribute to the increased susceptibility of the developing lung to
hyperoxia
and may contribute to impaired lung vascular and alveolar growth in BPD.
...
PMID:Hyperoxia reduces bone marrow, circulating, and lung endothelial progenitor cells in the developing lung: implications for the pathogenesis of bronchopulmonary dysplasia. 1720 39
Exposure of animals to
hyperoxia
decreases lung VEGF mRNA expression concomitant with an acute increase in
VEGF
protein within the epithelial lining fluid (ELF). The
VEGF
concentration in ELF is in excess of that found in the plasma, leading to the hypothesis that
hyperoxia
stimulates the release of
VEGF
protein from stores within the extracellular matrix. To test this hypothesis in a cell culture system, we exposed A549 cells to 95% O(2) (Ox) for 48 h followed by recovery in room air (RA) for 24 h. We found that Ox increased
VEGF
protein two- to threefold within the medium at 48 h of exposure and during recovery. Heparin clearing revealed the medium to contain a 50/50 mixture of the heparin-binding (
VEGF
(165)) and heparin-nonbinding (
VEGF
(121)) proteins and that Ox increased both proteins equally. Transcriptional activation of
VEGF
seems unlikely to explain the increase in
VEGF
protein, as expression of full-length and splice variant VEGF mRNA was unchanged by
hyperoxia
. Analysis of cell-associated
VEGF
proteins found that Ox increased the expression of
VEGF
(121) and
VEGF
(165) proteins. Blocking binding sites with exogenous heparin enhanced
VEGF
protein in the medium from RA-grown cells, whereas heparinase digestion of bound
VEGF
revealed a greater reserve of
VEGF
protein in RA cells. Collectively these findings indicate that
hyperoxia
enhances the expression of
VEGF
(121/165) proteins and facilitates the release of
VEGF
(165) from cell-associated stores. Increases in
VEGF
in ELF may represent an adaptive response fostering cell survival and type II cell proliferation in O(2)-induced lung injury.
...
PMID:Hyperoxia enhances VEGF release from A549 cells via post-transcriptional processes. 1766 48
Hyperoxic rats treated with inosine during oxygen exposure have increased levels of active transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta in the bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL), yet alveolar epithelial type 2 cells (AEC2) isolated from these animals demonstrate less
hyperoxia
-induced DNA damage and increased expression of active Smad2. To determine whether TGF-beta1 signaling per se protected AEC2 against hyperoxic damage, freshly isolated AEC2 from hyperoxic rats were incubated with TGF-beta1 for 24 h and assayed for DNA damage by fluorescein-activated cell sorter analysis of TdT-mediated dUTP nick end labeling. TGF-beta1 was protective over a concentration range similar to that in BAL of inosine-treated hyperoxic animals (50-5,000 pg/ml). TGF-beta1 also augmented
hyperoxia
-induced DNA repair activity and cell migration, stimulated autocrine secretion of fibronectin, accelerated closure of a monolayer scratch wound, and restored
hyperoxia
-depleted
VEGF
secretion by AEC2 to normoxic levels. The TGF-beta receptor type I activin-like kinase-4, -5, and -7 inhibitor peptide SB-505124 abolished the protective effect of TGF-beta on hyperoxic DNA damage and increased TdT-mediated dUTP nick end labeling in normoxic cells. These data suggest that endogenous TGF-beta-mediated Smad signaling is required for AEC2 homeostasis in vitro, while exogenous TGF-beta1 treatment of
hyperoxia
-damaged AEC2 results in a cell that is equipped to survive, repair, migrate, secrete matrix, and induce new blood vessel formation more efficiently than AEC2 primed by
hyperoxia
alone.
...
PMID:TGF-beta signaling promotes survival and repair in rat alveolar epithelial type 2 cells during recovery after hyperoxic injury. 1824 68
Pigment epithelium derived factor (PEDF) is an endogenous inhibitor of angiogenesis. However, its physiological role during vascular development and neovascularization remains elusive. Here we investigated the role of PEDF in normal postnatal vascularization of retina and retinal neovascularization during oxygen-induced ischemic retinopathy (OIR) using PEDF-deficient (PEDF-/-) mice. The beta-galactosidase staining of eye sections from PEDF-/- mice confirmed the expression pattern of endogenous PEDF previously reported in mouse retina. However, strongest staining was observed in the retinal outer plexiform layer. Retinal trypsin digests indicated that the ratio of endothelial cells (EC) to pericytes (PC) was significantly higher in PEDF-/- mice compared to wild type (PEDF+/+) mice at postnatal day 21 (P21). This was mainly attributed to increased numbers of EC in the absence of PEDF. There was no significant difference in the number of PC. We observed an increased rate of proliferation in retinal vasculature of PEDF-/- mice, which was somewhat compensated for by an increase in the rate of apoptosis. Staining of the retinal wholemounts and eye frozen sections indicated postnatal retinal vascularization expansion occurred at a faster rate in the absence of PEDF, and was more prominent at early time points (prior to P21). The retinal vascularization in PEDF+/+ mice reaches that of PEDF-/- mice such that no significant difference in vascular densities was observed by P42. Lack of PEDF had a minimal effect on the regression of hyaloid vasculature and
VEGF
levels. PEDF-/- mice also exhibited enhanced sensitivity to
hyperoxia
-mediated vessel obliteration during OIR compared to PEDF+/+ mice despite higher levels of
VEGF
. However, there was no significant difference in the degree of retinal neovascularization. Our studies indicate that PEDF is an important modulator of early postnatal retinal vascularization and in its absence retinal vascularization proceeds at a faster rate and is more susceptible to
hyperoxia
-mediated vessel obliteration.
...
PMID:PEDF-deficient mice exhibit an enhanced rate of retinal vascular expansion and are more sensitive to hyperoxia-mediated vessel obliteration. 1860 15
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