Hypoxic pulmonary hypertension (HPH) is a syndrome characterized by the increase of pulmonary vascular tone and the structural remodeling of peripheral pulmonary arteries. Mast cells have an important role in many inflammatory diseases and they are also involved in tissue remodeling. Tissue hypoxia is associated with mast cell activation and the release of proteolytic enzymes, angiogenic and growth factors which mediate tissue destruction and remodeling in a variety of physiological and pathological conditions. Here we focused on the role of mast cells in the pathogenesis of hypoxic pulmonary hypertension from the past to the present., H. Maxová, J. Herget, M. Vízek., and Obsahuje seznam literatury
The protective effect of therapeutic hypothermia in cardiac arrest survivors (CAS) has been previously well documented. Animal studies have indicated that attenuation of tissue oxidative stress (OS) may be involved in the mechanisms that lead to the beneficial effect of hypothermia. The extent of OS and nitric oxide (NO) production in adult CAS treated with endovascular hypothermia is, however, unknown. A total of 11 adult patients who experienced cardiac arrest out of hospital were included in the present study, and all were treated with mild hypothermia using the Thermogard XP (Alsius, USA) endovascular system. A target core temperature of 33 °C was maintained for 24 hours, with a subsequent rewarming rate of 0.15 °C per hour, followed by normothermia at 36.8 °C. Blood samples for the measurement of nitrotyrosine and nitrate/nitrite levels were drawn at admission and every 6 hours thereafter for two days. During the hypothermic period, the levels of nitrotyrosine and nitrates/nitrites were comparable with baseline values. During the rewarming period, serum levels of both parameters gradually increased and, during the normothermic period, the levels were significantly higher compared with hypothermic levels (nitrotyrosine, P<0.001; nitrates/nitrites, P<0.05). In our study, significantly lower levels of nitrotyrosine and nitrates/nitrites were demonstrated during hypothermia compared with levels during the normothermic period in adult CAS. These data suggest that attenuation of OS and NO production may be involved in the protective effect of hypothermia in adult CAS., A. Krüger ... [et al.]., and Obsahuje seznam literatury
The most dramatic changes in pulmonary circulation occur at the time of birth. We hypothesized that some of the effects of perinatal hypoxia on pulmonary vessels are permanent. We studied the consequences of perinatal exposure to hypoxia (12 % O2 one week before and one week after birth) in isolated lungs of adult male rats (~12 weeks old) perfused with homologous blood. Perfusion pressure-flow relationship was tilted towards lower pressures in the perinatally hypoxic as compared to the control, perinatally normoxic rats. A non-linear, distensible vessel model analysis revealed that this was due to increased vascular distensibility in perinatally hypoxic rats (4.1±0.6 %/mm Hg vs. 2.3±0.4 %/mm Hg in controls, P = 0.03). Vascular occlusion techniques showed that lungs of the perinatally hypoxic rats had lower pressures at both the pre-capillary and post-capillary level. To assess its role, basal vascular tone was eliminated by a high dose of sodium nitroprusside (20 µM). This reduced perfusion pressures only in the lungs of rats born in hypoxia, indicating that perinatal hypoxia leads to a permanent increase in the basal tone of the pulmonary vessels. Pulmonary vasoconstrictor reactivity to angiotensin II (0.1-0.5 µg) was reduced in rats with the history of perinatal hypoxia. These data show that perinatal hypoxia has permanent effects on the pulmonary circulation that may be beneficial and perhaps serve to offset the previously described adverse consequences., V. Hampl, J. Bíbová, J. Herget., and Obsahuje bibliografii
Exposure to chronic hypoxia results in hypoxic pulmonary hypertension characterized by structural remodeling of peripheral pulmonary vasculature. An important part of this remodeling is an increase of collagen turnover and deposition of newly formed collagen fibrils in the vascular walls. The activity of collagenolytic metalloproteinases in the lung tissue is notably increased in the first days of exposure to hypoxia. The increased collagenolytic activity results in the appearance of collagen cleavages, which may be implied in the triggering of mesenchymal proliferation in peripheral pulmonary arteries. We hypothesize that radical injury to pulmonary vascular walls is involved in collagenolytic metalloproteinase activation., J. Novotná, J. Herget., and Obsahuje bibliografii
Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) is a family of proteolytic enzymes involved in remodeling of extracellular matrix. Although proteolytic enzymes are produced by many cell types, mast cells seem to be more important than other types in remodeling of pulmonary arteries during hypoxia. Therefore, we tested in vitro production of MMPs and serine proteases in four cell types (mast cells, fibroblasts, vascular smooth muscle cells and endothelial cells) cultivated for 48 h under normoxic or hypoxic (3 % O2) conditions. MMP-13 was visualized by immunohistochemistry, MMP-2 and MMP-9 were detected by zymography in cell lysates. Enzymatic activities (MMPs, tryptase and chymase) were estimated in the cultivation media. Hypoxia had a minimal effect on total MMP activity in the cultivation media of all types of cells, but immunofluorescence revealed higher intensity of MMP-13 in the cells exposed to hypoxia except of fibroblasts. Tryptase activity was three times higher and chymase activity twice higher in mast cells cultivated in hypoxia than in those cultured in normoxia. Among all cell types studied here, mast cells are the most abundant source of proteolytic enzymes under normoxic and hypoxic conditions. Moreover, in these cells hypoxia increases the production of both specific serine proteases tryptase and chymase, which can act as MMPs activators., H. Maxová ... [et al.]., and Obsahuje bibliografii a bibliografické odkazy
Pulmonary hypertension resulting from chronic hypoxia is at least partly caused by the increased production of reactive oxygen species (ROS). The goal of the presented study was to investigate the dynamics and the site of production of ROS during chronic hypoxia. In our study Wistar rats were kept for 1, 4 and 21 days in an isobaric hypoxic chamber (FiO2=0.1), while controls stayed in normoxia. We compared NO production in expired air, plasma and perfusate drained from isolated rat lungs and measured superoxide concentration in the perfusate. We also detected the presence of superoxide products (hydrogen peroxide and peroxynitrite) and the level of ROS-induced damage expressed as the concentration of lipid peroxydation end products. We found that the production and release of ROS and NO during early phase of chronic hypoxia has specific timing and differs in various compartments, suggesting the crucial role of ROS interaction for development of hypoxic pulmonary hypertension., D. Hodyc ... [et al.]., and Obsahuje seznam literatury
The vessels on the fetal side of the placenta differ from most other vascular beds except the lungs in that they respond to acute hypoxia by vasoconstriction. An essential role of calcium influx in the mechanism of this hypoxic fetoplacental vasoconstriction (HFPV) has been shown previously. That finding does not, however, exclude the possible involvement of other mechanisms of vascular tone regulation. In this study we tested the hypothesis that Rho-kinase-mediated calcium sensitization is involved in HFPV. We used a model of isolated rat placenta dually perfused (from both the maternal and fetal side) with Krebs salt solution saturated with normoxic and hypoxic gas mixture respectively at constant flow rate. Rho-kinase pathway was inhibited by fasudil (10 μM). We found that fasudil reduced basal normoxic fetoplacental vascular resistance and completely prevented HFPV. This suggests that the activity of Rho-kinase signaling pathway is essential for HFPV., P. Kafka, ... [et al.]., and Obsahuje seznam literatury
Two mechanisms contribute in the development of pulmonary hypertension in pulmonary embolism (PE) - obstruction of pulmonary blood vessels and vasoconstriction. We hypothesize that hypoxia, increased shear stress and/or activation of gathered leukocytes in the PE may cause a release of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Therefore our aim was to determine the influence of the ROS scavenger Tempol on pulmonary hypertension and to d escribe NO synthase activity and production of NO oxidative products (NOx) after PE. In general anesthesia sephadex microspheres suspended in PSS were applied in right jugular vein as the pulmonary microembolism. Than we measured in isolated salt solution -perfused lungs the changes in perfusion pressure, activity of NO synthase and NOx plasma concentration in 7 groups of rats: C: control group (n=5), CN: C + sodium nitroprusside (SN) (n=5), EN: PE + SN (n=5), ETN: Tempol + PE + SN (n=5), CL : C + L -NAME (n=5 ), EL: PE + L-NAME (n=5), ETL: Tempol + PE + L -NAME (n=5). Tempol was applied intraperitoneally before PE. Animals that received Tempol (groups TN, TL) had significantly lower basal perfusion pressure than those which did not rec eive Tempol (EN, EL). Overa ll we measured a higher decrease of perfusion pressure than in the control group (C) after applica tion of SN. Administration of L-NAME after PE (EL) increased the pressure more than in the control group (NL). NOx concentration was higher after PE. We found that preventive administration of Tempol decreases the increase in perfusion pressure after PE. PE increased NO release and concentration of NOx., R. Mizera, D. Hodyc, J. Herget., and Obsahuje bibliografii
The effect of three-day fasting on cardiac ischemic tolerance was investigated in adult male Wistar rats. Anesthetized open-chest animals (pentobarbitone 60 mg/kg, i.p.) were subjected to 20-min left anterior descending coronary artery occlusion and 3-h reperfusion for infarct size determination. Ventricular arrhythmias were monitored during ischemia and at the beginning (3 min) of reperfusion. Myocardial concentrations of beta-hydroxybutyrate and acetoacetate were measured to assess mitochondrial redox state. Short-term fasting limited the infarct size (48.5±3.3 % of the area at risk) compared to controls (74.3±2.2 %) and reduced the total number of premature ventricular complexes (12.5±5.8) compared to controls (194.9±21.9) as well as the duration of ventricular tachycardia (0.6±0.4 s vs. 18.8±2.5 s) occurring at early reperfusion. Additionally, fasting increased the concentration of beta-hydroxybutyrate and betahydroxybutyrate/acetoacetate ratio (87.8±27.0) compared to controls (7.9±1.7), reflecting altered mitochondrial redox state. It is concluded that three-day fasting effectively protected rat hearts against major endpoints of acute I/R injury. Further studies are needed to find out whether these beneficial effects can be linked to altered mitochondrial redox state resulting from increased ketogenesis., M. Šnorek ... [et al.]., and Obsahuje seznam literatury
To test whether macrophages can play any role in hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction, we tested the in vitro response of rings from small pulmonary arteries to the activation of macrophages by FMLP, a substance stimulating predominantly membrane-bound NADPH oxidase. A small vessel myograph was used to measure the responses of rings from small pulmonary arteries (300-400 μ m) isolated from rat lungs. Rings from 5 rats were placed into both chambers of the myograph. The vessels were stabilized for 40 min and then normalized by automatic stretching to a wall tension equivalent to the intravascular pressure 30 mm Hg. At the start of each experiment, vessels were exposed to 80 mM K + to obtain maximal contractile response, which was used to normalize subsequent contractile responses. 2x10 6 viable macrophages, obtained by peritoneal lavage, were added into one chamber, then 5 μ M FMLP was administrated to both chambers and the tension measurement was started. The hydrogen peroxide concentration produced by stimulated macrophages was measured luminometrically. The concentrations of H 2 O 2 in specimens from chambers containing activated macrophages rose from 3.5±1.5 nM to 110±28 nM within 25 min of stimulation, while FMLP itself didn’t increase the H 2 O 2 concentration from the baseline value (4.5±3 nM) in samples from control chambers. After FMLP administration, the tension of the vessel rings in the presence of macrophages reached 0.23±0.07 of maximal contractile response, it did not change in controls. The additi on of ROS scavenger 4-hydroxy- TEMPO blocked the contractile response to the activation of macrophages. We conclude that the activation of macrophages stimulates the contraction of small pulmonary arteries and that this contraction is probably mediated by reactive oxygen species., M. Žaloudíková, J. Herget, M. Vízek., and Obsahuje bibliografii a bibliografické odkazy