Serotonin-induced smooth muscle hyperplasia in various forms of human pulmonary hypertension.
Hyperplasia of pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells (PA-SMCs) is a hallmark pathological feature of pulmonary hypertension (PH). Serotonin (5-HT) is involved in the hyperplasia through its interactions with specific receptors and internalization by a specific plasma membrane transporter. We investigated the expression and role of the 5-HT transporter (5-HTT) and 5-HT1B, 5-HT2A, and 5-HT2B receptors in lungs and isolated PA-SMCs from patients with primary PH (n=14), pulmonary veno-occlusive disease (n=4), or secondary PH (SPH, n=8) and nonpulmonary hypertensive control subjects. Whereas strong immunostaining for the three receptor types and 5-HTT was seen in remodeled pulmonary vessels from patients in all PH categories, only 5-HTT expression was increased in lungs and cultured PA-SMCs from patients versus controls. The increased growth response of PA-SMCs from patients with primary PH, pulmonary veno-occlusive disease, or SPH to 5-HT or serum was entirely attributable to 5-HTT overexpression, because 5-HTT inhibitors but not 5-HT receptor antagonists abolished 5-HT mitogenic activity and reduced the serum-induced growth response to similar levels in patients as in controls. The L-allelic variant of the 5-HTT gene promoter, which is associated with 5-HTT overexpression, was present homozygously in 14 of 25 (56%) lung transplantation patients with SPH but in only 27% of controls. Polymorphism of the 5-HTT gene promoter was only partly responsible for the increased 5-HTT expression in PH, because PA-SMCs from patients exhibited higher 5-HTT levels than same-genotype cells from controls and no additional promoter sequence alterations were found. We conclude that 5-HTT overexpression is a common pathogenic mechanism in various forms of PH.[1]References
- Serotonin-induced smooth muscle hyperplasia in various forms of human pulmonary hypertension. Marcos, E., Fadel, E., Sanchez, O., Humbert, M., Dartevelle, P., Simonneau, G., Hamon, M., Adnot, S., Eddahibi, S. Circ. Res. (2004) [Pubmed]
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