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Abstract Introduction The mechanisms regulating aberrant vascular remodelling in pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) are poorly understood and treatments targeted at halting or reversing this process are lacking. Toll-like receptor 3 (TLR3) is a viral sensor and more recently has been established as a sensor of endogenous damage signals, responding to mRNA released by damaged cells. TLR3 signalling induces pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokine production and regulates inflammation-associated apoptosis and tyrosine kinase signalling. In a model of systemic arterial injury, TLR3 signalling was shown to modulate neointimal remodelling in a protective manner. TLR3 is also expressed in pulmonary artery smooth muscle (PASMCs) and endothelial cells (PAECs). We therefore hypothesised that TLR3 would play roles in pulmonary vascular remodelling. Methods TLR3-deficient (TLR3−/−) or wild-type C57BL/6 (WT) mice were exposed to hypoxia (10% Oxygen) and given Sugen 5416 (weekly 20 mg/kg subcutaneous injections) or maintained in normoxic conditions for 3 weeks. Haemodynamic (cardiac catheterisation and echocardiography) and histological assessments were performed after 3 weeks. Human PASMCs were serum-starved before stimulation with PDGF or poly(I:C) and proliferation was assessed after 72 hours. Results TLR3−/− mice developed a markedly exaggerated phenotype of PAH in response to Sugen/Hypoxia with increased right ventricular systolic pressures (WT 51.6 mmHg ± 4.6 vs. TLR3−/− 73.0 mmHg ± 6.8; p < 0.05, mean ± SEM, n = 6), increased muscularisation of small pulmonary arteries and reduced right ventricular cardiac output (WT 424.2 RVUmin-1 ± 84.2 vs. TLR3−/− 283.3 RVUmin-1 ± 18.4, mean ± SEM, min n = 6) after 3 weeks. Poly(I:C) suppressed PDGF-induced PASMC proliferation in a dose-dependent manner. Conclusions We have shown that mice deficient in TLR3 develop a markedly exaggerated haemodynamic pulmonary hypertension phenotype and human PASMC proliferation is suppressed by the TLR3 ligand, poly(I:C). Together these data imply that TLR3 signalling in disease mediates a protective phenotype in keeping with that observed in systemic vascular remodelling, and identify a protective pathway potentially amenable to therapeutic targeting.

Type

Poster

Publication Date

08/12/2016

Keywords

Toll-like receptor, TLR3, pulmonary hypertension