학술논문

Autophagic Protein LC3B Confers Resistance against Hypoxia-induced Pulmonary Hypertension
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine. Mar 01, 2011 183(5):649-658
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
1073-449X
Abstract
RATIONALE:: OBJECTIVES:: METHODS:: MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS:: Human PH lungs displayed elevated lipid-conjugated LC3B, and autophagosomes relative to normal lungs. These autophagic markers increased in hypoxic mice, and in human pulmonary vascular cells exposed to hypoxia. Egr-1, which regulates LC3B expression, was elevated in PH, and increased by hypoxia in vivo and in vitro. LC3B or Egr-1, but not Beclin 1, mice displayed exaggerated PH during hypoxia. In vitro, LC3B knockdown increased reactive oxygen species production, hypoxia-inducible factor-1α stabilization, and hypoxic cell proliferation. LC3B and Egr-1 localized to caveolae, associated with caveolin-1, and trafficked to the cytosol during hypoxia. CONCLUSIONS:: The results demonstrate elevated LC3B in the lungs of humans with PH, and of mice with hypoxic PH. The increased susceptibility of LC3B and Egr-1 mice to hypoxia-induced PH and increased hypoxic proliferation of LC3B knockdown cells suggest adaptive functions of these proteins during hypoxic vascular remodeling. The results suggest that autophagic protein LC3B exerts a protective function during the pathogenesis of PH, through the regulation of hypoxic cell proliferation.