Hypusine Signaling Promotes Pulmonary Vascular Remodeling in Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension

Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2024 Jan 23. doi: 10.1164/rccm.202305-0909OC. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Rationale: The ubiquitous polyamine spermidine is essential for cell survival and proliferation. One important function of spermidine is to serve as a substrate for hypusination, a post-translational modification process that occurs exclusively on eukaryotic translation factor 5A (eIF5A) and ensures efficient translation of various gene products. Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a life-threatening disease characterized by progressive obliteration of the small pulmonary arteries (PAs) due to excessive proliferation of PA smooth muscle cells (PASMCs) and suppressed apoptosis.

Objectives: To characterize the role of hypusine signaling in PAH.

Methods: Molecular, genetic, and pharmacological approaches were used both in vitro and in vivo to investigate the role of hypusine signaling in pulmonary vascular remodeling.

Measurements and main results: Hypusine forming enzymes (deoxyhypusine synthase, DHPS and deoxyhypusine hydroxylase, DOHH) and hypusinated eIF5A are overexpressed in distal PAs and isolated PASMCs from PAH patients and animal models. In vitro, inhibition of DHPS using GC7 or short hairpin RNA resulted in a decrease in PAH-PASMC resistance to apoptosis and proliferation. In vivo, inactivation of one allele of Dhps targeted to smooth muscle cells alleviates PAH in mice and that its pharmacological inhibition significantly decreases pulmonary vascular remodeling and improves hemodynamics and cardiac function in two rat models of established PAH. Using mass spectrometry, we show that hypusine signaling promotes the expression of a broad array of proteins involved in oxidative phosphorylation, thus supporting the bioenergetic requirements of cell survival and proliferation.

Conclusions: These findings support inhibiting hypusine signaling as a potential treatment for PAH.

Keywords: DHPS; hypusine; right ventricular failure; smooth muscle cells; spermidine.