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General Capillary Endothelial Cells Undergo Reprogramming into Arterial Endothelial Cells in Pulmonary Hypertension through HIF-2α/Notch4 Pathway.

bioRxiv 2024 March 11
Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is characterized by a progressive increase of pulmonary vascular resistance and obliterative pulmonary vascular remodeling that result in right heart hypertrophy, failure, and premature death. The underlying mechanisms of loss of distal capillary endothelial cells (ECs) and obliterative vascular lesion formation remain unclear. Our recent single-cell RNA sequencing, spatial transcriptomics analysis, RNASCOPE, and immunostaining analysis showed that arterial ECs accumulation and loss of capillary ECs were evident in human PAH patients and pulmonary hypertension (PH) rodents. Pseudotime trajectory analysis of the single-cell RNA sequencing data suggest that lung capillary ECs transit to arterial ECs during the development of PH. Our study also identified CXCL12 as the marker for arterial ECs in PH. Capillary EC lineage tracing approach using capillary specific-Dre;Tdtomato reporter mice demonstrated that capillary ECs gave rise to arterial ECs during PH development. Genetic deletion of HIF-2a or pharmacological inhibition of Notch4 normalized the arterial programming in PH. In conclusion, our study demonstrates that capillary endothelium transits to arterial endothelium through the HIF-2a-Notch4 pathway during the development of PAH. Thus, targeting arterial EC transition might be a novel approach for treating PAH patients.

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