Published ahead of print on August 24, 2006, doi:10.1164/rccm.200506-848OC
© 2006 American Thoracic Society doi: 10.1164/rccm.200506-848OC
Vascular Remodeling Is Airway Generation-Specific in a Primate Model of Chronic AsthmaDivision of Pulmonary and Critical Care, Department of Internal Medicine, University of California, Davis Medical Center; California National Primate Research Center; and Department of Anatomy, Physiology, and Cell Biology, and Department of Pathology, Microbiology, and Immunology, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California, Davis, Davis, California Correspondence and requests for reprints should be addressed to Mark Avdalovic, M.D., UC Davis Medical Center, Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Pulmonary & Critical Care, 4150 V Street, PSSB #3400, Sacramento, CA 95817. E-mail: mark.avdalovic{at}ucdmc.ucdavis.edu
Rationale: Changes in the density of bronchial vessels have been proposed as a part of airway remodeling that occurs in chronic asthma. Objectives: Using an established nonhuman primate model of chronic allergic asthma, we evaluated changes in vascular density as well as the contribution of bronchial epithelium to produce vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). Methods: Eight juvenile rhesus macaques were divided into two groups of four. One group was exposed to 11 cycles of aerosolized house dust mite allergen (HDMA), whereas the other was exposed to filtered air. Bronchial wall vasculature was identified using an immunohistochemical approach, and vascular density was quantified stereologically. A semiquantitative polymerase chain reaction approach was used to estimate VEGF splice variant gene expression at discrete airway generations. Cell culture of primary tracheal epithelial cells with varying concentrations of HDMA was used to quantify the direct contribution of the epithelium to VEGF production. Results: Bronchial vascular density was increased at mid- to lower airway generations, which was independent of changes in the interstitial compartment. The VEGF121 splice variant was significantly increased at lower airway generations. VEGF protein increased in a dose-dependant fashion in vitro primarily by an increase in VEGF121 gene expression. Conclusion: This study highlights that increased vascular density in an animal model of chronic allergic asthma is airway generation specific and associated with a unique increase of VEGF splice variant gene expression. Airway epithelium is the likely source for increased VEGF.
Key Words: angiogenesis asthma remodeling rhesus vascular endothelial growth factor
The role of vascular remodeling in the pathogenesis of inflammatory diseases such as asthma has received a great deal of attention in the last few years. Recent studies have described an increase in bronchovascular density in patients with asthma and asthmalike disease (1). These studies have suggested that an increase in bronchial wall vascular density is part of airway remodeling. Although it is currently an accepted component of airway remodeling, quantity and spatial distribution of vascular density is not known. The pathophysiology of airway remodeling is clearly due to multiple gene products, but most recent studies have focused on the contributions of a single protein, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). Patients with asthma have been shown to have elevated VEGF in their sputum, and VEGF-producing cells in the mucosa. It is noteworthy that mice that overproduce VEGF have an enhanced Th2 immune response to allergen that is attenuated when VEGF expression is decreased (2). Although it appears that VEGF is a marker for inflammation, it is not clear if this is harmful or beneficial. For example, VEGF-overproducing mice that demonstrate an asthmalike phenotype with allergen stimulation are also protected against hypoxic lung injury (3). The distribution of increased bronchovascular density in asthma has not been well defined. Previous work has established that subepithelial vessels within airways are derived from the bronchial circulation (4). Although it is now accepted that there is an alteration in bronchial vascular density as a part of airway remodeling in asthma, anatomic detail of this process is lacking. Human studies have relied on very proximal airway biopsies and bronchoalveolar lavage (1). Because asthma often involves mid- to small airway generations, the airway level of highest vascular density has not been determined. Whether this increased vascular density parallels an increase in other compartments of the airway, such as the peribronchial interstitial compartment, is also not known. It is possible that the surface area of bronchial vessels is increased due to an increase in the peribronchial interstitial compartment volume. To assess the relative bronchial vascular density in human asthma along the entire bronchial airways would be difficult in humans. Accordingly, an animal model of asthma used to quantify vessel density must closely resemble human bronchial anatomy (4). Previous studies have focused on the contribution of VEGF to bronchial vascular remodeling (1, 2). These studies have established VEGF as a central protein in bronchial vascular remodeling. However, the role of the epithelium and specific VEGF isoforms has not been established. VEGF was previously known as vascular permeability factor. It is mitogenic and chemotactic for endothelial cells. In humans, the gene for VEGF consists of eight exons separated by eight introns (5). At least four different isoforms have been described due to alternative splicing: VEGF121, VEGF165, VEGF189, and VEGF206. VEGF121 andVEGF165 are soluble and diffusible with mitogenic activity, whereas VEGF189 and VEGF206 are almost completely bound to the extracellular matrix (6). A few studies have shown a parallel between airway physiology and VEGF production (7, 8). Many cell types have been identified as a source of VEGF, but few have focused on the airway epithelium as the initial source of the angiogenic stimulus. We used an established nonhuman primate model of chronic asthma, and morphometric techniques to quantify and define bronchial vascular density at separate airway generations (9). The main focus of our study was to define the spatial aspect of vascular remodeling and to assess the potential independent contribution of the epithelium to local angiogenesis. This animal model closely resembles human bronchial anatomy and can effectively answer the remaining questions regarding increased bronchial vascular density. An in vitro approach was used to directly assess the contribution of tracheobronchial epithelium in response to house dust mite allergen (HDMA). Some aspects of this study have previously been presented in abstract form at the 2005 American Thoracic Society International Conference, San Diego, California (10).
Animal and Exposure Protocol The design of this study is illustrated in Figure 1. This protocol was approved by the institution's Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC) ethical review board. Eight juvenile (between 3 yr 8 mo to 3 yr 10 mo in age) male rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulata) weighing 5.1 to 7.6 kg were randomly assigned to the following exposure groups: (1) filtered air (FA; n = 4) or (2) aerosolized HDMA (n = 4) in repeated biweekly doses. All monkeys were selected from the California National Primate Research Center's breeding colony on the basis of social rank, treated with ivermectin (subcutaneously at 0.2 mg/kg) for potential parasites, and isolated indoors for 1 mo. For pulmonary function testing, monkeys were sedated with ketamine hydrochloride (510 mg/kg, intramuscularly) or propotol (0.10.2 mg/kg/min, intravenously). For necropsy, monkeys were deeply sedated with intravenous sodium pentobarbital, dosed at the attending veterinarian's discretion. All monkeys were monitored with clinical exams by the veterinary staff at the California National Primate Research Center for any signs of infection or other disease. HDMA animals were sensitized by subcutaneous injection of 12.5 µg HDMA (Dermatophagoides farinae) in 10 mg alum, followed by intramuscular injection of 0.25 ml of 2.5 x 1011 Bordetella pertussis in alum, followed by subcutaneous injection of HDMA in alum in the beginning of Week 3. Monkeys received 94 mg HDMA or saline (FA controls) intranasally under anesthesia 14 and 16 d after the initial subcutaneous HDMA injection. Sensitization was confirmed by a positive HDMA skin test before HDMA aerosol challenges. Sensitized animals received aerosolized HDMA for 2 h/d on Days 35 of a 2-wk cycle for 22 wk. Nonsensitized animals were exposed to FA at the same time. Physiologic data was obtained while animals were anesthetized and intubated at the beginning of the 22 wk and after cycles 6 and 10.
Reagents Chemical reagents for cell culture included the following: Spinner's minimum essential medium (S-MEM) (1x) without glutamine, penicillin/streptomycin, gentamycin, L-glutamine (100X; GIBCO, Inc., Rockville, MD), bronchial epithelial growth medium (BEGM) (Clonetics/Cambrex, Inc., Walkersville, MD), trypsin inhibitor type II-S soybean, protease type XIV, fetal bovine serum (Sigma-Aldrich, Inc., St. Louis, MO), Cell Prime 100 (Cohesion Technologies, Inc., Palo Alto, CA), and trypsin/ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (Clonetics/Cambrex, Inc.). Antibodies used for immunofluorescent histochemistry included rabbit anti-human von Willebrand factor (vWf; Dako, Inc., Carpinteria, CA) and secondary antibodies Alexa 488 (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR). Background blocking agent was goat IgG (Sigma-Aldrich).
Pulmonary Function
Necropsy and Immunohistochemistry Protocol
In Vivo VEGF Gene Expression
Morphometry
In this normalization, the interstitial volumes are in the numerator and denominator and divide to one (12).
Cell Culture After the cells reached confluence, the cells were trypsinized with trypsin/EDTA and plated into 6-well plates at a concentration of 7.5 x 105 cells per well or at a concentration of 6.25 x 104 cells per well for 48-well plates. Cells reached confluence in 2 to 3 d. Cells are grown on a thin layer of Cell Prime 100 collagen 1 h before cell plating. Cell Prime 100 collagen consists of Cell Prime 100 (40 ml), 5x F12 medium (6.6 ml), and 0.2 N NaOH (3.4 ml).
In vitro HDMA exposure.
SEMIQUANTITATIVE PCR.
VEGF PROTEIN QUANTITATION.
Statistical Analysis
HDMA Exposure Leads to Increased Airway Resistance Animals exposed to HDMA developed increased airway resistance over the 10-cycle exposure protocol (Figure 2). Each animal exposed to HDMA over the course of 10 exposure cycles demonstrated an increase in airway resistance. By contrast, each animal in the FA group had an overall decrease in airway resistance measurements during the experimental period.
Subepithelial Vascular Density Is Increased in Airways of HDM-treated Animals
Airway Levelspecific Variability in VEGF Gene Expression To more accurately quantify relative differences in VEGF abundance, tissue from airway generations was used to quantify VEGF splice variant gene expression. As shown in Figure 6, relative gene expression of the VEGF121 splice variant was found to be significantly more abundant in the lower airway generations (p = 0.004).
HDMA Stimulates VEGF Gene Expression and Protein Production in Airway Epithelial Cells Primary tracheal epithelial cells were cultured in the presence of an increasing concentration of HDMA. After an overnight incubation, supernatant was collected and VEGF protein was quantitated using an ELISA kit. Figure 7 shows the results of two separate culture experiments that demonstrated an increase in VEGF production proportional to HDMA concentration. Both experiments were performed in the presence of polymixin B to block any potential effect from LPS.
Semiquantitative PCR was used to assess the relative differences in gene expression of VEGF splice variants in cultured epithelial cells treated with increasing amounts of HDMA. Figure 8 demonstrates the increasing relative expression of VEGF. VEGF121 expression increased with greater HDMA exposure and made up a greater proportion of all splice variants at the highest HDMA.
The rhesus macaque model of chronic asthma has previously been used to validate the characteristic pathology of airway remodeling, including thickened basement membrane, mucous cell hyperplasia, and smooth muscle hypertrophy (9, 14, 15). This study definitively established that bronchial wall vascularity is increased and is airway generation specific in a nonhuman primate model of chronic allergic asthma. This increase in vascular density involves the bronchial circulation and is most prominent in the mid- to small airway generations. Subepithelial vascular sprouting was more prominent in allergen-sensitized as compared with FA monkeys. This increased vascularity was not associated with an increase in the volume of the interstitial compartment. In vitro experiments showed that HDMA directly stimulated tracheal epithelial cells to produce VEGF in a dose-dependent manner. In vitro data demonstrated that VEGF activity was increased at both the gene and protein level, with the soluble VEGF121 splice variant being the most markedly increased. Ex vivo analysis of discrete airway generations also demonstrated VEGF121 gene expression to be most abundant. Previous biopsy and autopsy studies have described increased vascularity in patients with asthma (1, 16, 17). In a study of 20 fatal cases of asthma, Dunnill (16) identified a dilatation of capillary blood vessels. Studies using bronchoscopy have identified an increased vascularity in the bronchial interstitium in atopic patients with asthma. Bronchoscopic approaches in these studies used carinal biopsies from a single area. Furthermore, the determination of increased vascular density was determined by dividing vessel or vascular area by the thickness of the biopsies. These approaches did not sample the entire airway or account for the changing thickness or diameter of the airways and therefore contained undefined bias. Others have shown no increase in interstitial vascularity in patients with mild asthma or in those with fatal asthma (18, 19). Possible explanations for these findings are that the whole airway was not evaluated with design-based stereologic methods and that patients with fatal asthma may be a separate entity from those with chronic mild to moderate asthma. We used design-based stereologic methods for our estimates of the conducting airways, including the bronchial vessels. The use of vertical sections, defined along the plane of preferred orientation for anisotropic microstructures or local vertical sections perpendicular to the airway epithelium as used in this study, and a cycloid test system gives surface density estimates that correct for anisotropic orientation directly using the SV equation above (11). Ratio densities to a reference volume (SV in this case) can be misleading independent of the knowledge of changes in the reference compartment and has been termed the "reference trap" by Braendgaard and Gundersen (20). Normalization of the bronchial vessel surface to the surface of the epithelial basement membrane surface changes the reference from the potentially changeable volume of the interstitium, which can be markedly influenced by inflammation, and substitutes the more stable surface of the epithelial basement membrane. We have found the epithelial basement membrane surface to be a stable reference for normalizing changes in both the epithelial and interstitial compartments in acute inflammation (21). This study evaluated bronchial vascularity along the entire airway. Vascular density was found to be increased with every quantitative estimate we made. Surface area normalized to the surface area of the epithelial basement membrane of the airway was significantly increased at mid- to lower airway generations. This represents the most direct measurement of abundance because the surface-to-surface ratio is unencumbered by potential interstitial volume changes. Subepithelial vascular budding was particularly prominent in HDMA monkeys. This finding supports similar observations in a murine model of a VEGF-stimulated asthmalike process (22). This establishes the spatial heterogeneity of bronchial vascular remodeling in asthma. Therapeutically, this could be advantageous because drug therapy can be delivered more discretely to areas of disease while partially sparing more normal areas. In this study, animals exposed to FA had no change in vascular surface area or density across airway generations. HDMA-exposed animals had an increase in both the vascular surface area and density across airway generations. Maximal surface area and density were seen in airway generation 5. These results suggest that increased airway resistance in this animal model is related to the vascular remodeling in midairway generations. This study focused on and highlighted the potential contribution of airway epithelium in this process. Previous studies have also demonstrated VEGF production by lung epithelium. Koyama and colleagues showed that transformed alveolar and bronchial epithelial cells express VEGF constitutively and can be stimulated to increase production (23). Respiratory syncytial virus stimulates increased VEGF protein biosynthesis in transformed alveolar epithelial cells (24). In vitro data have also shown that cockroach antigen alters bronchial airway epithelial permeability through increased VEGF release (25). In the current study, in vitro data demonstrated a dose-dependent increase in VEGF protein production. This increase in protein expression was accompanied by an increase in gene expression. Using a semiquantitative PCR approach, VEGF121 gene expression was significantly increased in cultured epithelial cells exposed to HDMA as well as in intraparenchymal small airways. By contrast, matrix-bound isoforms did not demonstrate increased expression. Although human studies have shown VEGF165 to be the main VEGF variant protein found in lavage fluid, others have demonstrated VEGF121 gene expression in human lung (26, 27). VEGF121 is freely diffusible and has been described as chemokinetic for monocytes (28). In addition, VEGF121 has been shown to induce nitric oxide (NO) from endothelium to a greater degree than VEGF165 (29). Its angiogenic potential was more dependent on activation of endothelial NO synthase than VEGF165. Exhaled NO is used experimentally to monitor the clinical course in asthma, which may be a marker for changes VEGF121 gene expression (30). The current study supports the hypothesis that airway epithelium can trigger vascular remodeling through increased expression of VEGF121. Several questions remain unanswered regarding the role of vascular remodeling in asthma. It is not clear if vascular remodeling is protective from more severe airway destruction as might be seen in chronic bronchitis or emphysema. The current study shows that vascular remodeling involves the bronchial circulation, is airway generation specific, and is independent of volume changes in the airway interstitium. The airway epithelium is a source of VEGF production after allergen exposure and potentially influences local angiogenesis and leukocyte emigration in this animal model of chronic asthma.
The authors thank Mary Stovall for her help with immunohistochemistry work and Brian Tarkington for his help with allergen exposure.
Supported by NIEHS P01 ES00628 (C.G.P.). Originally Published in Press as DOI: 10.1164/rccm.200506-848OC on August 24, 2006 Conflict of Interest Statement: None of the authors has a financial relationship with a commercial entity that has an interest in the subject of this manuscript. Received in original form June 2, 2005; accepted in final form August 21, 2006
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