1. Introduction
Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a highly proliferative, vascular remodelling disease leading to right heart failure and death, with endothelin-1 (ET-1) implicated as an important mediator of vasoconstriction and remodelling in this disease [
1,
2]. Prostacyclin and its chemically stable analogues, iloprost and treprostinil, are used extensively in the treatment of PAH [
2,
3,
4]. Early work on prostacyclin or its analogues (the prostacyclins) considered that activity at the prostanoid IP receptor significantly contributed to their pharmacological properties in humans [
5], including potent vasodilator effects in the pulmonary vasculature [
2,
6,
7] and anti-proliferative effects in distal pulmonary arterial smooth muscle cells (PASMCs) derived from normal lungs [
8,
9]. Based on this concept, selexipag, a novel non-prostanoid and highly selective IP receptor agonist was developed for PAH [
10,
11] and is now a clinically approved treatment [
12].
Prostacyclins have diverse effects on prostanoid IP, EP
1, EP
2, EP
3 or DP
1 receptors at clinical concentrations [
5]. Radioligand binding assays for human prostanoid receptors showed that treprostinil had high affinity towards EP
2, DP
1 and IP receptors [
13], and this was more recently independently confirmed in several isolated smooth muscle preparations [
14]. Furthermore, compared to other prostacyclin analogues, enhanced and more prolonged cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) generation was previously reported for treprostinil in both human PASMCs (HPASMCs) and mouse alveolar macrophages, strongly suggesting signalling through additional Gs-coupled receptors [
9,
15]. In macrophages this was largely accounted for by the activation of EP
2 receptors [
15]. That other receptors might contribute to the action of treprostinil in the pulmonary vasculature, is supported by our previous work where IP receptor-independent mechanisms largely mediated the anti-proliferative effects of treprostinil in HPASMCs derived from PAH patients [
16]; this occurred against a backdrop of decreased IP receptor expression.
The role of EP
2 receptors in regulating pulmonary smooth muscle proliferation has yet to be established. However, these receptors underlie the anti-proliferative effects of prostaglandin E
2 in airway smooth muscle cells [
17], they are upregulated by smooth muscle growth factors known to be increased in PAH [
18,
19,
20] and are protective against neointimal hyperplasia caused by vascular injury [
20]. By contrast, there are no reports so far showing DP
1 receptors significantly regulating smooth muscle proliferation.
Here, we hypothesize that treprostinil exerts strong anti-proliferative actions through the activation of the EP
2 receptor in HPASMCs derived from patients with PAH, which becomes the dominant pharmacological target either because of the enhanced expression of EP
2 receptors and/or the down-regulation of IP receptors. Moreover, treprostinil has a 10 fold higher affinity at the EP
2 receptor compared to the IP receptor [
13]. In the present work, we defined the role of IP and EP
2 prostanoid receptors using highly selective prostanoid receptor agonists, antagonists, and gene-silencing techniques using small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) to “knockdown” the EP
2 receptor. The effects of treprostinil were directly compared to the active selexipag metabolite, MRE-269 (ACT-333679), a specific agonist at the IP receptor [
10], whose activity in HPASMCs from PAH patients has not been examined previously. EP
2 receptor expression was assessed in human pulmonary vascular tissue from normal and PAH patients using quantitative-PCR (qPCR) and immunohistochemical techniques. This work now demonstrates that the selexipag metabolite acts exclusively via the IP receptor to modulate the proliferation of smooth muscle cells. By contrast, this study identifies for the first time, that EP
2 receptors are upregulated in PAH and are important negative modulators of pulmonary artery smooth muscle proliferation, thus representing a previously unrecognized therapeutic target for treprostinil.
3. Discussion
The current studies have now identified a key role of prostanoid EP
2 receptors in the regulation of human pulmonary arterial smooth muscle proliferation. Following the identification of treprostinil as a potent activator of prostanoid EP
2 receptors [
13], we now demonstrate for the first time using the EP
2 receptor antagonist, PF-04418948 [
25], as well as EP
2 receptor siRNAs, that the anti-proliferative effect of treprostinil at therapeutic doses appears largely dependent on activation of the EP
2 receptor in HPASMCs from PAH patients. We also now demonstrate that the non-prostanoid IP receptor agonist MRE-269 has anti-proliferative activity, though unlike treprostinil, its activity is abolished by the highly selective IP receptor antagonist, RO1138452 [
16] and is not affected by either PF-04418948 or EP
2 siRNAs. This implies a predominant or sole role for the IP receptor in the anti-proliferative actions of MRE-269 in HPASMCs from PAH patients, and by extrapolation, of its parent molecule selexipag.
The earlier findings using RO1138452 to antagonise IP receptors [
16] have now also been extended to explore a more extensive range of treprostinil concentrations (1 pM to 10 µM). This new work in HPASMCs from PAH patients demonstrates that when EP
2 receptors are inhibited with PF-04418948, RO1138452 causes a significant rightward shift of the concentration-response curve to treprostinil. This suggests both EP
2 and IP are activated by a broad range of treprostinil concentrations and that the receptor-driven anti-proliferative effects of IP activation are more fully unmasked under conditions of substantial EP
2 antagonism. However, RO1138452 generally failed to substantially antagonise responses at higher concentrations of treprostinil (10 nM or greater), further suggesting that non-IP receptor targets contribute. This contrasts with studies in normal human PASMCs and in normal human proximal pulmonary arteries, where the anti-proliferative and vasorelaxation responses to treprostinil were abolished by RO1138452, consistent with a major role of the IP receptor [
7,
16]. The extent to which EP
2 receptors are functionally active in normal distal pulmonary arteries and cultured PASMCs is unknown and should in the future be investigated.
To confirm the presence of functional EP
2 receptors in our PAH cells, we used butaprost, a selective EP
2 receptor agonist, which has little to no activity at the human IP receptor (Ki ~ 100 µM) or any other prostanoid receptor [
24] and fails to elicit an anti-proliferative response in EP
2 receptor null-mice [
20], or as in this study, to significantly elevate cAMP after treatment with EP
2 siRNAs. The threshold to significantly inhibit proliferation was 1 nM, similar to that previously reported for the inhibition of proliferation in murine aortic cells [
20]. Consistent with the specificity of butaprost, PF-04418948 abolished its anti-proliferative effects over the entire concentration range and inhibited the anti-proliferative activity of treprostinil, substantially shifting the concentration-response curve over the entire range. Likewise, EP
2 receptor siRNAs substantially reversed the treprostinil effects on cell growth, clearly demonstrating a predominant contribution of EP
2 receptors. The activation of EP
2 receptors, in addition to the IP receptor, may in part account for the higher maximal anti-proliferative response to treprostinil compared to that seen with the IP-selective agonist, MRE-269. Of note, the EP
2 receptor does not undergo rapid agonist-induced desensitization in vitro [
29], whereas the IP receptor does [
5,
29]. This suggests signalling via EP
2 receptors may give rise to longer lasting beneficial effects in PAH, and may provide another option in those patients seen not to be responding well to selexipag and subsequently identified with low IP expression or limited functional capacity of this receptor. It should be noted that the anti-proliferative responses to treprostinil at higher concentrations (1 µM and above) were not fully inhibited in the presence of both IP and EP
2 receptor antagonists suggesting an additional mechanism may be operating at the higher doses. This could involve the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-γ (PPARγ), which via a mechanism that appears independent of cAMP generation, could play a significant role in mediating the anti-proliferative effects of treprostinil in human PASMCs isolated from PAH patients [
16].
We observed a striking difference in the pattern of prostanoid receptor mRNA expression in HPASMCs derived from control versus PAH patients. While prostanoid receptor mRNA was similarly expressed in control cells, with the exception of EP
3 and DP
1 which were much lower, the relative expression of EP
2 over the IP receptor was enhanced 84-fold at the message level and 7-fold at the protein level in PAH cells. At this stage, it is impossible to gauge if the medication given to PAH patients influenced our current findings in HPASMCs and pulmonary arteries obtained from these patients. Nonetheless, enhanced gene expression of EP
2 receptors compared to controls has been reported in airway smooth muscle cells [
17] and also in lung fibroblasts [
30] derived from patients with asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, respectively. Furthermore, enhanced EP
2 receptor expression was noted during neointimal proliferation and was reported to underlie the increased anti-proliferative effects of PGE
2 and butaprost treatment in airway smooth muscle cells from asthmatics, and to be up-regulated in response to platelet-derived growth factor [
17,
20] and transforming growth factor β [
19], key drivers of smooth muscle proliferation in PAH [
18]. The opposite relationship was observed for IP receptor expression, which was markedly reduced in PAH HPASMCs, supporting previous observations that this receptor is down-regulated either as a consequence of disease or the PAH therapy [
16,
28]. Likewise, we found in pulmonary arteries from PH patients, that the rise in EP
2 to IP receptor mRNA expression ratio compared to controls could largely be accounted for by a fall in IP receptor expression (not shown). Similarly, in a rat monocrotaline model of PAH, mRNA levels for IP, EP
1 and EP
3 were all down-regulated in distal PASMCs, whereas the EP
2 and EP
4 receptor expression was essentially unaltered [
28]. Irrespective of IP receptor downregulation, treprostinil reversed monocrotaline-induced vascular medial thickening in the rat [
31]. Taken together, EP
2 receptors appear to be more robustly expressed in human pulmonary tissue in PAH compared to IP receptors, which appear more labile.
Previous reports suggested that in large human pulmonary artery vessels, EP
2 receptors are weakly functional because of an active EP
3 system [
32], though curiously high sensitivity to EP
2 agonists was noted in some instances [
33]. We observed a far stronger staining of EP
2 receptors in small versus large arteries, suggesting EP
2 receptors may play a greater role in small pulmonary vessels. Although the functional consequence of activating these receptors in the lung requires investigation, studies in EP
2−/− gene-deleted mice show that EP
2 receptors regulate blood pressure and underpin the vasodilator response to PGE
2 [
27].
This high expression of EP
2 receptors in HPASMCs and small blood vessels from the lungs of patients with end-stage PAH contrasts with the weak staining for the IP receptor and PPARγ previously reported in the intimal proliferating cells of distal arteries from IPAH patients [
16]. The role of EP
2 receptors in the context of remodelling in PAH is unknown, though neointimal hyperplasia in response to femoral artery injuries was markedly accelerated in EP
2−/− mice and associated with the increased proliferation and migration of vascular smooth muscle cells [
20] and fibroblasts [
34], suggestive of a protective role of EP
2 receptors in vascular remodelling.
EP
2 receptor staining was observed in the adventitial layer of arteries and in plexiform lesions in lung sections from PAH patients. The adventitial staining is likely to come from fibroblasts, which reside predominately in this layer, undergoing proliferation and producing significant amounts of collagen to increase adventitial thickness [
35,
36]. EP
2 receptor staining may also come from inflammatory cells, particularly monocytes and dendritic cells, which also reside in the adventitia of remodelled arteries in PAH [
18,
35]. Thus, the elevated EP
2 receptor expression relative to other prostanoid receptors found in the current study may reflect its up-regulation as a consequence of the disease. Importantly, EP
2 receptors have a range of inhibitory actions on fibroblast function that could be beneficial in PAH [
34,
37].
The current study provides strong evidence for a key role of prostanoid EP2 receptors in the anti-proliferative effects of treprostinil on PASMCs from PAH patients. This contrasts with prostanoid IP receptors that appear to be entirely responsible for the anti-proliferative properties of MRE-269, the active metabolite of selexipag. The broader pharmacological receptor profile of treprostinil may be important in pathologic conditions such as in PAH where down-regulation of the IP receptor occurs. Indeed, this current data strongly suggest that the activation of the more robust and highly expressed EP2 prostanoid receptor pathway, in concert with or in lieu of IP receptor signalling, makes an important contribution to the therapeutic activity of treprostinil. Thus, the EP2 receptor represents a previously unrecognised modulator of human pulmonary vascular cell proliferation, and hence remodelling, which has clinical implications for the treatment of PAH.
4. Materials and Methods
4.1. Source, Isolation, and Culture of PASMCs from Hypertensive and Normal Patients
Lung tissue was taken after patient consent or the consent of a relative and with the Ethics Committee approval from the Great Ormond Street Hospital (ICH and GOSH REC 05/Q0508/45, 11/4/05 and 16/3/2010) and the Assistance Public–Hôpitaux de Paris (IRB00006477, agreement No. 11-045, 31/3/11). Samples were obtained from patients (n = 10) diagnosed as having IPAH who went on to have a transplant after failed treatment or who had died. Tissues were also obtained from patients with pulmonary hypertension due to lung diseases and/or hypoxia (group 3 classification) where the mean pulmonary artery pressure (mPAP) was 30 ± 3 mmHg. For controls, donor lungs not suitable for transplantation, but otherwise histologically normal, or parenchymal strips from macroscopically normal regions of lungs from patients with suspected malignancy, were used (n = 8).
Primary cell lines of distal HPASMCs were derived by enzymatic dissociation as previously described [
16] and grown at 37 °C in a humidified atmosphere of 5% CO
2 in human smooth muscle basal medium (SMBM; Lonza, Slough, UK) containing 9% FBS (Life Technologies, Paisley, UK) and penicillin/streptomycin (45 units/mL Life Technologies). After reaching confluence, cells were washed with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS; Life Technologies) and treated with 0.25% trypsin-EDTA (Life Technologies) for further passage. Only cells between passage 2 and 10 were used in experiments.
4.2. Cell Proliferation Assays
To assess the concentration-dependent effects of putative anti-proliferative agents (0.01–10,000 nM), HPASMCs from PAH patients were seeded onto 96- (MTS assay) or 6- (cell counting) well plates at a density of 1 × 104 cells/mL (total volume 100 μL or 2 mL, respectively). Cells were grown in SMBM containing 9% FBS, and after 24 h, the media was replaced with just SMBM for 48 h to growth-arrest cells. Subsequently, the cells were incubated in SMBM containing 9% FBS plus 3 nM ET-1 for 4 days in the absence and presence of 0.1% dimethyl sulphoxide (DMSO), with and without the test agent. Proliferation responses were compared to cells incubated with no added growth factors over the same time period (the time control). Each intervention was performed in quintuplicate (MTS) or in duplicate (cell counting).
In the majority of experiments, proliferation was assessed using an MTS cell proliferation assay kit (Promega, Southampton, UK), a colorimetric method for determining the number of viable cells based on the cleavage of MTS (3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-5-(3-carboxymethoxyphenyl)-2-(4-sulfophenyl)-2H-tetrazolium, inner salt) to formazan by cellular mitochondrial dehydrogenases. An increase in cell number leads to a proportional increase in the amount of formazan dye formed, which can be quantified by measuring the absorbance of the dye solution at 490 nm using a Versamax Microplate Reader (Sunnyvale, CA, USA). For each drug concentration, the absorbance was measured from five wells and the average was taken. The background absorbance was corrected by subtracting the average absorbance from the ‘no cell’ control wells from all other absorbance values. In other experiments (
Figure 2E,F and
Figure 4), cell number was counted using an automated cell counter (ADAM; Digital Bio, Seoul, Korea), which provides counts of the total and non-viable cells using the fluorescent DNA binding dye, propidium iodide in lysed and non-lysed cells, respectively. Cell proliferation was normalized to the growth response without the solvent (taken as 100%) and shown as the % cell proliferation. Comparison of the agonist effects were made in the same patient cell isolates, usually at a similar passage number with experiments run in parallel under identical conditions and proliferation assays performed on the same day.
4.3. Transfection of Small-Interfering RNA (siRNAs) Against EP2 Receptors
Human PASMCs from PAH patients were seeded onto 6-well plates, and after 24 h, they were growth arrested in serum-free SMBM (Lonza, UK) for 48 h. Cells were then transfected according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Briefly, the siRNA (ON-TARGETplus SMARTpool PTGER2; Dharmacon, Cambridge, UK) was diluted in Dharmafect while lipofectamine (Invitrogen, Paisley, UK) was made up in an OptiMen-1 buffer (Invitrogen). The two were then mixed in a 1:1 ratio and left for 20 min at room temperature. Cells were transfected in the growth medium containing penicillin/streptomycin (Life Technologies) in the absence or presence of 30 pM of EP2 receptor siRNA or the scrambled negative control (Dharmacon, UK), added 4 h prior to the addition of agonists. After 4 days, the cells were processed for Western Blotting, cAMP measurements, and qPCR as described below or the cells were counted in proliferation assays as described above.
4.4. Western Blotting
Cells were lysed in RIPA buffer (Sigma-Aldrich, Gillingham, Dorset, UK) containing phosphatase inhibitors, and centrifuged at 900× g for 15 min at 4 °C; the resulting supernatant was stored at −80 °C until use. Protein samples (10 µg) were run on a NuPAGE@ Bis-Tris gel (Invitrogen, Paisley, UK) alongside pre-stained molecular weight markers (Fermantas, Cambridge, UK) and then transferred electrophoretically to PVDF membranes (Invitrogen). Blots were washed in PBS containing 5% skimmed milk and 0.1% Tween-20 (PBST) before being incubated overnight at 4 °C with primary antibodies diluted in PBST against EP2 receptor (1:1000 Cayman Cat No. 101750; Cambridge Bioscience, Cambridge, UK) and HSP90 (1:1000; Cell Signaling Technology, Cat No. 4877; Hitchin, UK) and then the appropriate secondary antibody for one hour at room temperature. To ensure equal amounts of protein loading, the blots were stripped (RE-BLOT PLUS Western Blot Stripping Solution, Cat. No. 2502, Merk Millipore, Watford, UK) and re-probed with an anti-β-actin antibody. Protein bands were visualized using the enhanced chemiluminescence plus reagent detection system (GE Healthcare, Little Chalfont, Buckinghamshire, UK) and imaged via a Gel-Doc system (Snygene; Cambridge, UK). ImageJ (National Institute of Mental Health, Bethesda, MD, USA) was used to compare the density of the bands relative to β-actin for both the IP and EP2 prostanoid receptor protein.
4.5. Cyclic AMP Extraction and Measurement
Human PASMCs were incubated with either butaprost or treprostinil for 30 min and the reaction was stopped by aspirating the media and washing cells with 1 mL of cold PBS. Cyclic AMP was extracted from cells by lysing them in 0.1 M HCl for 20 min on ice, followed by centrifugation of the suspension at 1000× g for 10 min at 4 °C. Intracellular cAMP was measured using a competitive enzyme immunoassay according to the manufacturer’s instructions (ADI-900-163; Enzo Life Sciences, Exeter, UK). The protein concentration in the supernatant was determined using a bicinchoninic acid (BCA) protein assay kit (Novagen, Watford, UK) and cAMP normalised per mg of protein.
4.6. Real-Time Quantitative PCR (RT-qPCR)
4.6.1. Cultured HPASMCs
Quantitative PCR (qPCR) was used to determine the relative expression of different prostanoid receptors using a broadly similar method to that previously published [
38]. Cultured HPASMCs were lysed and treated with TRIzol reagent (Life Technologies, UK) which was mixed with chloroform, centrifuged, and the aqueous phase then combined with propran-2-ol. Following this, the sample was incubated at −20 °C for 1.5 h and the total RNA pellet isolated by centrifugation. The pellet was then washed twice in 75% ethanol and dissolved in 25 μL of nuclease-free water (Life Technologies, UK). The concentration and purity of RNA was determined using a NanoDrop-1000 Spectrophotometer (Thermo Scientific, Wilmington, DE, USA) by measuring the optical density between 260 and 280 nM (260/280) and between 260 and 230 nM (260/230). Only samples with ratio values of 260/280 and 260/230 within the range 1.7–2.0 were accepted as good quality RNA.
Complementary DNA (cDNA) was synthesised from 500 ng of total RNA in a reverse transcription reaction mixture containing MultiScribe Reverse Transcriptase (1.25 Unit/μL), dNTP (ATP, CTP, GTP, UTP; 500 μL each), 2.5 μM Oligo(dT)16 (to ensure the transcription of mRNA but not ribosomal or transfer RNA), RNase inhibitor (0.4 Unit/μL), MgCl2 (5.5 mM) and reaction RT buffer (Taqman Reverse Transcription Reagents kit, Applied Biosystems Roche, Branchburg, NJ, USA). The sample was incubated in a thermal cycler (Techne Genius; Stone, Staffordshire, UK) for 60 min at 42 °C, 15 min at 72 °C followed by holding at 4 °C. The cDNA was stored at −20 °C until used.
The primer set of human
PGTIR (NM_000960; IP receptor),
PTGER1 (NM_000955; EP
1 receptor),
PTGER2 (NM_000956; EP
2 receptor),
PTGER3 (NM_000957; EP
3 receptor),
PTGER4 (NM_000958; EP
4 receptor),
PGTDR (NM_000953; DP
1 receptor) and the reference gene
β-actin (NM_001101) were purchased from Qiagen (Manchester, UK). Real-time qPCR (RT-qPCR) were set up in triplicate in a 284-well microtitre plate using 5 μL per well from a 25 μL mixture containing 12.5 μL of the SYBR-green solution (Applied Biosystems, Loughborough, UK), 2.5 μL of primer and 10 μL of cDNA (25 ng). RT-qPCR was performed using an automated thermal cycler (ABI Prism 7900HT Sequence Detection System; Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA, USA). The PCR cycle was 50 °C for 2 min, 95 °C for 15 min, followed by 40 cycles at 94 °C for 15 s, 56 °C for 30 s and 76 °C for 30 s. The relative amount of cDNA was calculated using the “2
−ΔΔCt threshold cycle” method, which involves comparing the CT values of the samples of interest with a reference gene,
β-actin, where CT is defined as the number of cycles required for the fluorescent signal to exceed background levels [
39].
4.6.2. Pulmonary Artery
Arteries (3–6 mm internal diameter) were ground in liquid nitrogen and RNA was isolated using a tissue RNA kit (OMEGA bio-tek, Norcross, GA, USA). cDNA was synthesised using the Moloney murine leukaemia virus reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, USA). The reaction was conducted for 90 min at 37 °C using 0.16 μg of RNA in 10 μL of the reaction mixture, 0.5 mM of M-MLV, and 0.5 µg/µL of Poly-d(T). RT-qPCR was performed using a LightCycler 480 Roche qPCR (Roche Diagnostics, Meylan, France). RT-qPCR was conducted in duplicate, with 4 µL of the cDNAs transferred to each real-time reaction together with 500 nM of primers and the SYBR Green Master Mix (Roche Diagnostics). The human PCR primer sequences were 5′-CACGAGGAGCAAAGCAAGTG-3′ (sense), 5′-AGGTCTGGGCTCTCCAGTCTT-3′ (antisense), and 5′-TGCTCCTTGCCTTTCACGA-3′ for the IP receptor; 5′-TGCTCCTTGCCTTTCACGA-3′ (sense) and 5′-TCAGAACAGGAGGCCTAAGGA-3′ (antisense) for the EP2 receptor; and 5′-GGGCACCCTGGGCTAAACTGA-3′ (sense) and 5′-TGCTCTTGCTGGGGCTGGT-3′ (antisense) for the GAPDH gene. The PCR thermal cycling conditions were preincubation at 95 °C for 5 min, followed by 40 cycles at 95 °C for 10 s, 60 °C for 30 s and 72 °C for 15 s. The relative amount of cDNA was calculated using the “2−ΔΔCt threshold cycle” method as described above (4.6.1.) using a different reference gene, GAPDH.
4.7. Immunofluorescent Staining
Human PASMCs or human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs; Cellworks, Buckingham, UK) were seeded into 8-chambered slides (BD Falcon, Oxford, UK) and grown in DMEM/F-12 or RPMI 1640 (Life Technologies, UK) containing serum. After reaching the required confluency, the cells were fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde (PFA; Sigma-Aldrich), followed by permeabilization in 0.1% Triton X-100 (Sigma-Aldrich) for 10 min. Aspirated cells were then washed three times with PBS, followed by a 10 min incubation at room temperature with 3% bovine serum albumin (BSA) in 0.01% Triton X-100. Both primary and secondary antibodies were diluted in 3% BSA in 0.01% Triton X-100. The primary was added to chambers and left overnight at 4 °C and the appropriate secondary antibody added for one hour at room temperature followed by the addition of the fluorescent nuclear stain, DAPI (Vector Laboratories, Southgate UK). The following primary antibodies were used: mouse monoclonal anti-α-SMA (1:1000, A-2547; Sigma-Aldrich), rabbit polyclonal anti-SM-22 alpha (1:500, ab14106; Abcam, Cambridge, UK), polyclonal rabbit anti-human vWF (1:400, A0082; Agilent Technologies, Stockport, Cheshire, UK), and mouse monoclonal anti-human CD-31 (1:400, 35285S; Cell Signaling Technology, Hitchin, UK). Alexafluor-555 goat anti-mouse IgG (1:1000, A11001; Invitrogen, Paisley, UK) was used as a secondary for α-SMA and CD-31 staining and Alexafluor-488 donkey anti-rabbit IgG (1:1000, A21206; Invitrogen, Paisley, UK) was used for SM-22 and vWF staining. Omission of the primary antibody served as a negative control. Confocal imaging was performed using a LEICA TCS SPE upright microscope (Leica Microsystems, Milton Keynes, UK) and Z-stack images were acquired and analysed using proprietary LEICA LAS X Software (Leica Microsystems).
4.8. Histology and Immunohistochemistry
Blocks of lung tissue from control and PAH patients were fixed and 10 µM serial sections were cut for histological examination. Two slides of each section were stained to look for gross pathological changes using either hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining, where nuclei stain blue/purple while cytoplasm and muscle stain a purplish red or Van Gieson (EVG) staining, which stains collagen in red, elastic fibres and nuclei in black and other tissue elements in yellow. Antibodies to α-SMA (Sigma-Aldrich, Poole, UK; Cat No. A2547), the endothelium marker, CD-31 (Abcam, Cambridge, UK; ab28364) and the EP2 receptor (Abcam, Cat. No. ab117270), were used to probe for their expression in proximal and distal blood vessels. Sections were incubated overnight at 4 °C with the primary antibody (diluted in PBS with 0.1% BSA at 1:300–500) followed by incubation with a biotin-conjugated secondary antibody (Abcam) for 1 h at room temperature. Sections were then developed utilizing avidin-conjugated horseradish peroxidase (HRP) and staining was visualised with diaminobenzidine (Sigma-Aldrich) in sections lightly counterstained with haematoxylin (Sigma-Aldrich). Control and PAH sections were handled in the same way, being developed on the same day and exposed to the chromagen for exactly the same length of time. Omission of the primary antibody served as a negative control. Specificity of staining was controlled with an inappropriate secondary antibody. Colour images were acquired and the results were stored digitally after examination by virtual microscopy (Hamamatsu Photonics, Welwyn Garden City, UK).
For histological analysis, the endothelial and smooth muscle layers were identified by CD-31 and α-SMA staining, respectively, in serial sections of distal pulmonary arteries. The staining area was quantified using the ImageJ colour threshold function, which filters out unwanted colours and then transforms the image into an 8-bit format. The staining area was quantified using the “Analyse Particles” function which assigns a pixel value based on the intensity of the brown staining. Staining in the adventitial layer and plexiform lesions was excluded from the quantification analysis. Data were expressed as the pixel area of the respective staining for CD-31, α-SMA or EP2 receptor or as the ratio of EP2/α-SMA+CD31 area staining.
4.9. Materials
MRE-269 ([4[(5,6-diphenylpyrazinyl)(1methylethyl) amino]butoxy]acetic acid was purchased from Cayman Chemical Company (Ann Arbor, MI, USA) and PF-04418948 (selective EP2 antagonist) was purchased from Tocris Bioscience (Bristol, UK). RO-1138452 (IP selective antagonist) and butaprost (15-deoxy-16S-hydroxy-17-cyclobutyl PGE1 methyl ester), a selective EP2 agonist, was purchased from Cambridge Bioscience UK and endothelin-1 peptide from Enzo Life Science (Exeter, UK). Treprostinil was supplied by the United Therapeutics Corp (Research Triangle Park, NC, USA). Stocks of all drugs were made up in sterile DSMO (Sigma-Aldrich) to a final concentration of 10 mM. Drugs were serially diluted in growth medium, with the solvent concentration in each well remaining constant (0.1%).
4.10. Statistical Analysis
Data are expressed as mean ± S.E.M. of n experiments from a minimum of 4 cell isolates derived from different patients. The maximal % inhibition (I
Max) and the log concentration causing 50% inhibition (IC
50) of cell proliferation was extrapolated from each single experiment using the variable slope sigmoidal-curve fitting routine obtained using the Prism 7 software (GraphPad, San Diego, CA, USA). The data are reported as IC
50 (nM) values for clarity in the text or negative log (pIC
50) values to allow appropriate pharmacological statistical evaluation in
Table S2. Significance was assessed between two groups using a Student
t-test and between multiple groups using either one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) where Dunnett’s was used for comparisons against a control and Newman-Keuls test for multiple comparisons of different groups or by two-way ANOVA (with Bonferroni or Holm–Sidak’s multiple comparisons test) as indicated in the legend.
p-value < 0.05 was considered significant, but only shown at the 95% confidence limit.
4.11. Key Principles of the Study Methodology
This work was conducted with due attention to detailed proposals recently discussed by Bonnet and colleagues [
40] and Provencher and colleagues [
41] concerning the limitations of the potential translation of basic research using human tissue to PAH disease presenting in patients. Thus, due care was taken regarding the isolation and purity of the HPASMCs, their histological assessment in situ and the appropriate selection of patients and cells for both control samples and PAH samples. To this end, the same protocol for cell incubation and data acquisition was used for both “control cells” and “PAH cells” along with the replication of results in multiple cell lines over a wide patient age range. In all figure legends, the number of independent biological data points and patient samples has been included. The number of technical replicates is defined in each methods section. The concept that EP
2 receptors will be targeted (activated) at therapeutic concentrations of treprostinil has been independently verified in two further species: mouse and rabbit [
14]. All datasets on which the conclusions of this article rely will be made available on request, as long as they are within ethical consideration to prevent amongst other things, patient identification.