Liver angiocrine myeloid-derived growth factor protects against endothelial dysfunction in pulmonary arterial hypertension

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Abstract

Myeloid-derived growth factor (MYDGF) is a hepatic angiokine with protective effects in systemic vascular beds, but its role in pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is unknown. We hypothesized that hepatic MYDGF deficiency contributes to pulmonary endothelial activation in PAH and that recombinant MYDGF could rescue endothelial injury. In the Sugen-hypoxia (SuHx) rat model, hepatic MYDGF expression was decreased, while pulmonary vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 (VCAM-1) expression was increased. Human hepatic sinusoidal endothelial cells exposed to pro-inflammatory macrophage conditioned media downregulated MYDGF, and recombinant MYDGF restored pulmonary artery endothelial cell resistance to inflammatory activation via MAP4K4/NFκB signaling. In the Brown University PHiNE PAH cohort (n=41 PAH, n=27 controls), plasma proteomics demonstrated increased MYDGF in PAH patients compared with controls, but MYDGF levels declined with worsening liver stiffness and correlated with higher pulmonary vascular resistance. In the independent Servetus PAH cohort (n=117), higher plasma MYDGF was associated with mortality and right ventricular dilation. Together, these findings demonstrate hepatic MYDGF deficiency in experimental PAH, tissue specificity of endothelial MYDGF to the liver, and MYDGFs potential to mitigate pulmonary endothelial inflammation. However, human data suggest a paradoxical association of elevated circulating MYDGF with adverse outcomes, underscoring the complex biology of angiogenic growth factors in PAH. MYDGF may represent a novel hepatic angiokine linking systemic inflammation, liver dysfunction, and pulmonary vascular disease.

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