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Query: UNIPROT:P43026 (
lipopolysaccharide
)
62,215
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD)-associated
pulmonary hypertension
(PH) is a chronic infantile lung disease that lacks curative therapies. Infants with BPD-associated PH are often exposed to hyperoxia and additional insults such as sepsis that contribute to disease pathogenesis. Animal models that simulate these scenarios are necessary to develop effective therapies; therefore, we investigated whether
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
) and hyperoxia exposure during saccular lung development cooperatively induce experimental BPD-PH in mice. C57BL/6J mice were exposed to normoxia or 70% O
2
(hyperoxia) during postnatal days (PNDs) 1-5 and intraperitoneally injected with varying
LPS
doses or a vehicle on PNDs 3-5. On PND 14, we performed morphometry, echocardiography, and gene and protein expression studies to determine the effects of hyperoxia and
LPS
on lung development, vascular remodeling and function, inflammation, oxidative stress, cell proliferation, and apoptosis.
LPS
and hyperoxia independently and cooperatively affected lung development, inflammation, and apoptosis. Growth rate and antioxidant enzyme expression were predominantly affected by
LPS
and hyperoxia, respectively, while cell proliferation and vascular remodeling and function were mainly affected by combined exposure to
LPS
and hyperoxia. Mice treated with lower
LPS
doses developed adaptive responses and hyperoxia exposure did not worsen their BPD phenotype, whereas those mice treated with higher
LPS
doses displayed the most severe BPD phenotype when exposed to hyperoxia and were the only group that developed PH. Collectively, our data suggest that an additional insult such as
LPS
may be necessary for models utilizing short-term exposure to moderate hyperoxia to recapitulate human BPD-PH.
...
PMID:Interactive and Independent Effects of Early Lipopolysaccharide and Hyperoxia Exposure on Developing Murine Lungs. 3290 20
Background:
In 2012, mutations in Cav1 were found to be the driving mutation in several cases of heritable pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). These mutations replaced the last 21 amino acids of Cav1 with a novel 22-amino-acid sequence. Because previously only Cav1 knockouts had been studied in the context of PAH, examining the
in vivo
effects of this novel mutation holds promise for new understanding of the role of Cav1 in disease etiology.
Methods:
The new 22 amino acids created by the human mutation were knocked into the native mouse Cav1 locus. The mice underwent hemodynamic, energy balance, and inflammatory measurements, both at baseline and after being stressed with either a metabolic or an inflammatory challenge [low-dose
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
)]. To metabolically challenge the mice, they were injected with streptozotocin (STZ) and fed a high-fat diet for 12 weeks.
Results:
Very little mutant protein was found
in vivo
(roughly 2% of wild-type by mass spectrometry), probably because of degradation after failure to traffic from the endoplasmic reticulum. The homozygous mutants developed a mild, low-penetrance PAH similar to that described previously in knockouts, and neither baseline nor metabolic nor inflammatory stress resulted in pressures above normal in heterozygous animals. The homozygous mutants had increased lean mass and worsened oral glucose tolerance, as previously described in knockouts. Novel findings include the preservation of Cav2 and accessory proteins in the liver and the kidney, while they are lost with homozygous Cav1 mutation in the lungs. We also found that the homozygous mutants had a significantly lower tolerance to voluntary spontaneous exercise than the wild-type mice, with the heterozygous mice at an intermediate level. The mutants also had higher circulating monocytes, with both heterozygous and homozygous animals having higher pulmonary MCP1 and MCP5 proteins. The heterozygous animals also lost weight at an
LPS
challenge level at which the wild-type mice continued to gain weight.
Conclusions:
The Cav1 mutation identified in human patients in 2012 is molecularly similar to a knockout of Cav1. It results in not only metabolic deficiencies and mild
pulmonary hypertension
, as expected, but also an inflammatory phenotype and reduced spontaneous exercise.
...
PMID:Expression of a Human Caveolin-1 Mutation in Mice Drives Inflammatory and Metabolic Defect-Associated Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension. 3301 95
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