Published ahead of print on September 6, 2007, doi:10.1164/rccm.200610-1559OC
© 2007 American Thoracic Society doi: 10.1164/rccm.200610-1559OC
Role of Endothelium-derived CC Chemokine Ligand 2 in Idiopathic Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension1 INSERM U841 and Département de Physiologie Explorations Fonctionnelles, Hôpital H. Mondor, AP-HP, Créteil, France; 2 INSERM U764, UPRES EA2705, Service de Pneumologie, Centre National de Référence de l'Hypertension Artérielle Pulmonaire, Hôpital Antoine-Béclère, Assistance-Publique Hôpitaux de Paris, Université Paris-Sud 11, Clamart, France; and 3 UPRES EA2705, Service de Chirurgie Thoracique, Vasculaire et de Transplantation Cardiopulmonaire, Hôpital Marie Lannelongue, Le Plessis Robinson, France Correspondence and requests for reprints should be addressed to Saadia Eddahibi, Ph.D., INSERM U841, Faculté de Médecine 8, avenue Général Sarrail, 94010 Créteil, France. E-mail: eddahibi{at}im3.inserm.fr
Rationale: Inflammatory cytokines may affect pulmonary vascular remodeling in idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension (IPAH). CC chemokine ligand 2 (CCL2) is synthesized by vascular cells and can stimulate monocyte/macrophage migration and smooth muscle cell (SMC) proliferation. Objectives: To investigate the role of CCL2 in IPAH. Methods: CCL2 levels in plasma, monocytes, lungs, and medium from pulmonary endothelial cell (P-EC) or pulmonary artery SMC (PA-SMC) cultures were measured by ELISA and Western blot analysis. CCL2 receptor CCR2 mRNA levels in monocytes, P-ECs, and PA-SMCs were measured by real-time polymerase chain reaction. Effect of CCL2 on PA-SMC proliferation and migration was assessed using [3H]thymidine incorporation and a modified Boyden's chamber. The effect of endothelial cell–derived CCL2 on monocyte migration was measured using a modified Boyden's chamber. Measurements and Main Results: Compared with control subjects, we found the following in patients with IPAH: elevated CCL2 protein levels in plasma and lung tissue, whereas monocyte CCL2 levels were similar between patients and control subjects, and elevated CCL2 release by P-ECs or PA-SMCs. P-ECs released twice as much CCL2 than did PA-SMCs. Monocyte migration was markedly increased in the presence of P-ECs, and the increase was larger with P-ECs from patients with IPAH. CCL2-blocking antibodies reduced P-ECs' chemotactic activity by 60%. Compared with controls, PA-SMCs from patients exhibited stronger migratory and proliferative responses to CCL2, in keeping with the finding that CCR2 was markedly increased in PA-SMCs from patients. Conclusions: These results suggest that CCL2 overproduction may be a feature of the abnormal P-EC phenotype in IPAH, contributing to the inflammatory process and to pulmonary vascular remodeling.
Key Words: pulmonary hypertension endothelial cells smooth muscle cells chemokines CCL2
Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is characterized by an increase in pulmonary vascular resistance that impedes the ejection of blood by the right ventricle and leads to right ventricular failure. Idiopathic PAH (IPAH) is a clinical term used to describe a rare and fatal condition for which no underlying cause can be found. The hallmark pathologic feature of IPAH is vascular obstruction of small pulmonary arteries due to proliferation of endothelial cells (ECs) and smooth muscle cells (SMCs) in association with thrombus formation (1). Accumulating evidence suggests a role for inflammation in the pathogenesis of PAH (2). Perivascular inflammatory cell infiltrates composed chiefly of monocytes and macrophages are often found in lungs from patients with IPAH (3). Moreover, compared with healthy control subjects, patients with IPAH exhibit higher circulating levels and pulmonary expression of inflammatory cytokines and chemokines, including interleukin (IL)-1 and IL-6 (4), platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) (5), and chemokines such as macrophage inflammatory protein-1 , RANTES (regulated upon activation, normal T-cell expressed and secreted), and fractalkine (6, 7). The mechanisms underlying pulmonary vessel infiltration by monocytes/macrophages are unclear, and the role for inflammatory cells in pulmonary vascular remodeling remains to be elucidated. Inflammation may occur as a secondary event during progression of PAH or may develop as part of the intrinsic vessel-wall cell abnormalities associated with IPAH. In a recent study, we found that pulmonary ECs (P-ECs) constitutively released growth factors that acted on pulmonary artery SMCs (PA-SMCs) (8). Whether intrinsic P-EC abnormalities during IPAH include the expression and release of inflammatory cytokines remains to be further investigated. One of the major cytokines synthesized by vascular cells and acting as a potent mediator of monocyte/macrophage activation and migration is CC chemokine ligand 2 (CCL2) (formerly called monocyte chemoattractant protein [MCP]-1), which has been implicated in a wide range of chronic inflammatory processes, including atherosclerosis (9). The effects of CCL2 are mediated through the CC chemokine receptor 2 (CCR2), which is expressed by many cell types including monocytes and vascular SMCs (10). Evidence for a critical role of CCL2 in experimental PAH was recently obtained in monocrotaline-exposed rats, in which antibodies or antisense oligonucleotides directed against CCL2 prevented the occurrence of pulmonary vascular remodeling (11). The role for CCL2 in pulmonary vascular remodeling in human IPAH is unknown, and the mechanism leading to increased CCL2 production in patients with IPAH has not been identified. Here, we measured plasma and lung CCL2 levels in patients with IPAH to determine whether the abnormal pulmonary vascular cell phenotype in IPAH was associated with CCL2 overproduction. The effects of EC-derived CCL2 on migration of monocytes, and on migration and proliferation of PA-SMCs, were assessed in vitro.
This study was approved by our institutional review board (Hôpital Henri Mondor, Creteil, France). All patients and control subjects signed an informed consent document before study inclusion. A detailed description of the methods is available in the online supplement.
Study Population
Study population for experiments on lungs and pulmonary artery cells.
Isolation and Culture of P-ECs and PA-SMCs
Circulating Monocyte Isolation
Real-time Quantitative Reverse Transcriptase–Polymerase Chain Reaction for Measurement of CCR2 mRNA Levels
CCL2 Western Blotting
Measurements of CCL2 Concentrations in Plasma, Circulating Monocytes, Lungs, and Medium from P-ECs and PA-SMC Cultures
Lung CCL2 Immunolocalization
In Vitro Chemotaxis Assay
Effect of CCL2 on PA-SMCs Proliferation and Migration PA-SMCs migration was assessed using a modified Boyden's chamber (Transwell; Corning Costar Corporation).
Statistical Analysis
Protein Levels of CCL2 in Plasma and Monocytes from Patients with IPAH and Control Subjects Plasma CCL2 concentrations were increased nearly twofold in patients with IPAH compared with control subjects (504 ± 36 vs. 317 ± 22 pg/ml, P = 0.002) (Figure 1A). Plasma CCL2 levels were not correlated with , PVR, or cardiac index. In a subgroup of nine patients studied before and after prostacyclin therapy, plasma CCL2 concentrations remained unchanged (446 ± 50 vs. 505 ± 60 pg/ml, respectively; P = 0.76) (Figure 1B). To determine whether the elevated circulating CCL2 concentration was related to increased CCL2 synthesis by monocytes, we measured the CCL2 content of monocytes from patients with IPAH and control subjects by ELISA. As shown in Figure 1C, no significant difference was found (295 ± 30 pg/106 cells from patients with IPAH and 212 ± 42 pg/106 cells from control subjects, P = 0.17).
Lung CCL2 Protein Levels and Localization in Lungs from Patients with IPAH CCL2 concentrations were increased in lung tissues from patients with IPAH compared with control subjects when assessed by Western blotting (Figure 2A) or ELISA (330 ± 82 vs. 112 ± 15 pg/mg total protein, P = 0.01). Immunohistochemical examination of lung specimens from patients with IPAH and control subjects showed preferential localization of CCL2 in perivascular infiltrated inflammatory cells and in endothelial cells (Figure 2B). No CCL2 immunostaining was detectable in the media layer of pulmonary vessels.
CCL2 Protein Levels in Media of Quiescent Cultured P-ECs and PA-SMCs from Patients with IPAH and Control Subjects CCL2 protein levels were markedly increased in media of P-ECs and PA-SMCs from patients with IPAH compared with control subjects (2,293 ± 50 pg/105 patient P-ECs vs. 623 ± 163 pg/105 control P-ECs, P = 0.02; and 1,278 ± 163 pg/105 patient PA-SMCs vs. 336 ± 129 pg/105 control PA-SMCs, P = 0.01). CCL2 levels in PA-EC media were about fourfold higher than those in PA-SMC media (Figure 3), both with cells from patients and with cells from control subjects. This difference was not related to the nuclear factor (NF)- B signaling pathway, because phospho–NF- B p65 protein levels did not differ between patients and control subjects (0.91 ± 0.10 vs. 0.92 ± 0.26 arbitrary units [AU] [P, nonsignificant] in cultured P-ECs and 0.52 ± 0.27 vs. 0.58 ± 0.26 AU [P, nonsignificant] in PA-SMCs, respectively).
Effects of EC-derived CCL2 on Monocyte Migration The presence of P-ECs in the Transwell lower chamber induced migration of monocytes from the upper to the lower chamber. This effect was more marked when P-ECs from patients with IPAH were used, compared with P-ECs from control subjects. In both cases, monocyte migration fell by 60% in the presence of CCL2-blocking antibody (P < 0.01). The antibody also markedly reduced the chemotactic effect of exogenous CCL2, whereas control antibody had no effect (P < 0.001). Interestingly, the chemotactic activity of P-EC media did not differ between cells from control subjects and cells from patients with IPAH when these last were tested in the presence of CCL2-blocking antibody (Figure 4).
Effect of CCL2 on PA-SMC Proliferation and Migration CCL2 treatment of control PA-SMCs produced a concentration-dependent increase in [3H]thymidine incorporation, the maximal effect being observed with 10 ng/ml CCL2 (Figure 5A). Compared with values in control subjects, PA-SMC proliferation in response to CCL2 was more marked with cells from patients with IPAH (P < 0.05). Compared with values with cells under the basal condition (serum-free medium), the migration of PA-SMCs exposed to CCL2 increased in a concentration-dependent manner (Figure 5B), the maximal effect being achieved at 10 ng/ml. There was an increased migratory response to CCL2 of PA-SMCs from patients with IPAH compared with PA-SMCs from control subjects (Figure 5B).
CCR2 mRNA Levels in Circulating Blood Monocytes, P-ECs, and PA-SMCs from Patients with IPAH and Control Subjects In control subjects and patients with IPAH, CCR2 mRNA levels were higher in monocytes than in P-ECs or PA-SMCs. CCR2 mRNA levels were markedly increased in P-ECs and PA-SMCs from patients with IPAH compared with those from control subjects, whereas no differences in monocyte CCR2 mRNA concentrations were observed between patients with IPAH and control subjects (Figure 6).
In our study, IPAH was associated with increased plasma and lung levels of CCL2, and P-ECs were a major source of CCL2 in the lung. In patients with IPAH, the increase in P-EC–derived CCL2 contributed substantially to the increased chemotaxis exerted by P-EC media on monocytes. Moreover, CCL2 induced mitogenic and chemotactic effects on PA-SMCs. These effects were stronger on PA-SMCs from patients with IPAH, due to increased expression of CCR2, the specific CCL2 receptor. Taken together, our results show that P-ECs from patients with IPAH constitutively synthesize excessive amounts of CCL2, which behaves as a chemoattractant for circulating inflammatory cells and as a growth factor for PA-SMCs. Thus, CCL2 may affect both the inflammatory process and the pulmonary vascular remodeling seen during progression of IPAH. Endothelial activation, as occurs during atherosclerosis in response to oxidized lipids, leads to increased expression of chemokines and adhesion molecules, which induce recruitment of monocytes/lymphocytes into the subendothelium (15). During progression of PAH, increased lung expression of inflammatory cytokines coexists with accumulation of mononuclear inflammatory cells in the lungs and around the pulmonary vessels (3). The mechanisms that underlie these abnormalities are unknown. Although cytokines are secondary mediators of inflammation, they are not the primary triggers. In IPAH, the mechanisms by which inflammation develops and contributes to pulmonary vascular remodeling have not been elucidated. In the present study, we focused on CCL2, which has been extensively studied in atherosclerosis and has been shown to act as a potent attractant of monocytes into the vessel wall. Experimental studies suggest a major role for CCL2 in the development of monocrotaline-induced PAH. Thus, in rats injected with monocrotaline, increases in serum and lung CCL2 levels antedated the development of pulmonary vascular remodeling and pulmonary hypertension (16). Plasma CCL2 levels were increased in patients with IPAH or chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension, and some studies showed a positive correlation between CCL2 levels and PVR (17, 18).
In our study, plasma and lung CCL2 levels were elevated in patients with IPAH compared with control subjects, with no correlation between hemodynamic parameters and circulating CCL2 levels. Treatment with prostacyclin did not alter circulating CCL2 levels in a subgroup of nine patients. Interestingly, monocyte CCL2 content did not differ between patients with IPAH and control subjects, suggesting that the increased plasma CCL2 levels in IPAH did not originate in greater release from circulating monocytes. In contrast, the amount of CCL2 in media of cultured P-ECs and PA-SMCs from patients with IPAH was markedly elevated compared with that of control subjects. Our finding that CCL2 was expressed by both ECs and SMCs in the pulmonary circulation is consistent with previous studies of human cells from systemic blood vessels (18, 19). We found that the amount of CCL2 originating from ECs was 4 times greater than the amount from SMCs. Thus, ECs may be a major source of CCL2 in the lung. Results from patients with chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension showing predominant immunostaining of CCL2 in the endothelium and neointima of large elastic pulmonary arteries support this possibility (17). A major finding from our study was that cultured cells from patients with IPAH overproduced CCL2. This overproduction did not seem to result from activation of the NF- To determine whether P-EC–derived CCL2 differentially affected monocyte recruitment in patients with IPAH and control subjects, we used double cell cultures to evaluate the migration of monocytes from healthy control subjects in the presence of P-ECs from patients with IPAH or from control subjects. We found that P-ECs were potent stimulators of monocyte migration, and that this effect was stronger with P-ECs from patients than from control subjects. Antibodies directed against CCL2 diminished the chemoattractant activity of P-EC medium by 60%, suggesting that CCL2 contributed substantially to monocyte migration. Thus, P-ECs from patients with IPAH constitutively release chemokines that exert chemoattractant effects on inflammatory cells. CCL2 may be the main chemokine involved in this process during IPAH.
Human vascular cells may be both sources and targets of cytokines. The effects of CCL2 on target cells are mediated by the CCR2 receptor, which is expressed by several cell types, including monocytes and SMCs (20, 21) CCL2 exerts mitogenic effects on human SMCs from systemic blood vessels and acts synergistically with many growth factors, including serotonin (22). We found that human PA-SMCs expressed the CCR2 receptor and that the level of expression was higher for cultured PA-SMCs from patients with IPAH than from control subjects. As a result, PA-SMCs from patients with IPAH grew faster than those from control subjects and showed a tendency toward increased migration in response to exogenous CCL2. These mitogenic and migratory effects of CCL2 on PA-SMCs are consistent with a direct role for CCL2 in pulmonary vascular remodeling. Increased CCR2 expression by PA-SMCs may also be a feature of the abnormal PA-SMC phenotype in IPAH. In previous reports, PA-SMCs from patients with PAH exhibited excessive proliferation in response to serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine [5-HT]) or endothelin (ET)-1 but not to PDGF, epidermal growth factor (EGF), fibroblast growth factor (FGF), insulin growth factor (IGF), or transforming growth factor- The importance of CCL2 in PAH development was recently underlined by experimental animal studies showing that antisense oligonucleotides or anti-CCL2 antibodies protected against monocrotaline-induced PAH in rats (11, 16). Inflammation is known to be an important component of PAH in this model, raising the possibility that CCL2 may contribute to other forms of PAH. In recent studies, inflammation was shown to trigger development of PAH in BMPRII-deficient mice (27, 28). The present study in humans strongly supports a role for CCL2 overproduction in the pathogenesis of IPAH. The ability of CCL2 to both recruit inflammatory cells and act on PA-SMCs strongly suggests that CCL2 may be involved in both the inflammatory process and the pulmonary vascular remodeling that characterize IPAH.
The authors thank Ingrid Durand-Gasselin and Peter Dorfmüller for their technical assistance with the immunohistochemistry studies.
The South Paris Pulmonary Hypertension Center for Research and Care is supported in part by grants from Chancellerie des Universités, Legs Poix, Université Paris-Sud 11, the Fondation pour la Recherche Médicale, and the Institut des Maladies Rares. This research project received financial support from the European Commission under the 6th Framework Program (contract no. LSHM-CT-2005-018725, PULMOTENSION). This article has an online supplement, which is accessible from this issue's table of contents at www.atsjournals.org Originally Published in Press as DOI: 10.1164/rccm.200610-1559OC on September 6, 2007 Conflict of Interest Statement: None of the authors have a financial relationship with a commercial entity that has an interest in the subject of this manuscript. Received in original form October 30, 2006; accepted in final form September 6, 2007
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