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Pulsatile flow dynamics maintain pulmonary artery architecture
Stephen B. Spurgin, Lauren Thai, Tina C. Wan, Christopher P. Chaney, Mitzy A. Cowdin, Surendranath Veeram Reddy, Tarique Hussain, Munes Fares, M. Luisa Iruela-Arispe, Thomas Carroll, Andrew D. Spearman, Ondine Cleaver
Stephen B. Spurgin, Lauren Thai, Tina C. Wan, Christopher P. Chaney, Mitzy A. Cowdin, Surendranath Veeram Reddy, Tarique Hussain, Munes Fares, M. Luisa Iruela-Arispe, Thomas Carroll, Andrew D. Spearman, Ondine Cleaver
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Research Article Cardiology Vascular biology

Pulsatile flow dynamics maintain pulmonary artery architecture

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Abstract

Single-ventricle congenital heart disease (SV-CHD) is a uniformly lethal condition requiring the Glenn surgery, which as a side effect eliminates arterial pulsatility and contributes to pulmonary vascular complications. In Glenn patients, we quantified pulsatility loss in each dimension of force (flow, pressure, and stretch) using cardiac catheterization and MRI. To model and investigate the individual impact of each dimension of pulsatility loss on the pulmonary vasculature, we applied isolated pulsatile and non-pulsatile mechanical stimuli to pulmonary artery endothelial cells (ECs) in vitro. We found that each dimension of force triggered distinct transcriptional responses, revealing force-specific regulation of structural and signaling pathways. Pulsatile stretch uniquely stimulated EC secretion of PDGFB, a key driver of vascular smooth muscle cell (vSMC) recruitment. In a rat Glenn model, loss of pulsatility led to vascular wall thinning, loss of EC PDGFB, and reduced activation of smooth muscle PDGFBRβ, confirming in vivo relevance. Our findings uncover a mechanistic link between endothelial stretch sensing and PDGFB-mediated EC-vSMC crosstalk, essential for maintaining pulmonary artery architecture. Clinically, these insights suggest that restoring or mimicking pulsatile forces may help preserve vascular integrity and prevent remodeling in patients with SV-CHD.

Authors

Stephen B. Spurgin, Lauren Thai, Tina C. Wan, Christopher P. Chaney, Mitzy A. Cowdin, Surendranath Veeram Reddy, Tarique Hussain, Munes Fares, M. Luisa Iruela-Arispe, Thomas Carroll, Andrew D. Spearman, Ondine Cleaver

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Figure 3

Transcriptional impact of pulsatility is greatest in the dimension of stretch, where it drives expression of the EC-specific gene Pdgfb.

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Transcriptional impact of pulsatility is greatest in the dimension of st...
(A) Venn diagram of the number of genes significantly up- or downregulated by pulsatility of flow, pressure, or stretch (regardless of fold change). (B–D) Volcano plots of significantly regulated genes within each dimension of pulsatile force: (B) LSS, (C) pressure, and (D) stretch. (E) Genes upregulated by unique dimensions of pulsatile force in ECs were analyzed within the LungMAP single-cell RNA-seq data of human lung tissue (347,970 cells). Expression within ECs (purple box) was compared to other cell types. CCL14, CX3CL1, and PDGFB (black boxes) were uniquely expressed by ECs.

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