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Publication : High vascular pressure-induced lung injury requires P450 epoxygenase-dependent activation of TRPV4.

First Author  Jian MY Year  2008
Journal  Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol Volume  38
Issue  4 Pages  386-92
PubMed ID  17962608 Mgi Jnum  J:149727
Mgi Id  MGI:3848905 Doi  10.1165/rcmb.2007-0192OC
Citation  Jian MY, et al. (2008) High vascular pressure-induced lung injury requires P450 epoxygenase-dependent activation of TRPV4. Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol 38(4):386-92
abstractText  High vascular pressure targets the lung septal network, causing acute lung injury. While calcium entry in septal endothelium has been implicated, the channel involved is not known. This study tested the hypothesis that the vanilloid transient receptor potential channel, TRPV4, is a critical participant in the permeability response to high vascular pressure. Isolated lungs from TRPV4(+/+) or TRPV4(-/-) mice were studied at baseline or during high pressure challenge. Permeability was assessed via the filtration coefficient. Endothelial calcium transients were assessed using epifluorescence microscopy of the lung subpleural network. Light microscopy and point counting were used to determine the alveolar fluid volume fraction, a measure of alveolar flooding. Baseline permeability, calcium intensity, and alveolar flooding were no different in TRPV4(+/+) versus TRPV4(-/-) lungs. In TRPV4(+/+) lungs, the high pressure-induced permeability response was significantly attenuated by low calcium perfusate, the TRPV antagonist ruthenium red, the phospholipase A(2) inhibitor methyl arachidonyl fluorophosphonate, or the P450 epoxygenase inhibitor propargyloxyphenyl hexanoic acid. Similarly, the high pressure-induced calcium transient in TRPV4(+/+) lungs was attenuated with ruthenium red or the epoxygenase inhibitor. High vascular pressure increased the alveolar fluid volume fraction compared with control. In lungs from TRPV4(-/-) mice, permeability, calcium intensity, and alveolar fluid volume fraction were not increased. These data support a role for P450-derived epoxyeicosatrienoic acid-dependent regulation of calcium entry via TRPV4 in the permeability response to high vascular pressure.
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