AI Article Synopsis

  • Pulmonary hypertension is a serious and incurable condition with a poor prognosis, and there is an urgent need for novel treatment options beyond the current limited pharmacologic strategies.
  • Researchers found that the β adrenoceptor agonists terbutaline (TER) and salbutamol can cause vasorelaxation specifically in pulmonary arteries, a process that does not depend on β ARs but rather on the presence of α AR agonists.
  • The study also showed that TER effectively lowers pulmonary arterial pressure both in isolated lung models and in live mice, suggesting that β AR agonists may offer a new approach for treating pulmonary hypertension.

Article Abstract

Pulmonary hypertension is a severe, incurable disease with a poor prognosis. Although treatment regimens have improved during the last 2 decades, current pharmacologic strategies are limited and focus on the modulation of only a few pathways related to endothelin, NO, and prostacyclin signaling. Therefore, the identification of novel molecular targets is urgently needed. We found that the β adrenoceptor (AR) agonists terbutaline (TER) and salbutamol induced a dose-dependent vasorelaxation in large pulmonary arteries but not aortas of mouse. This effect was found to be independent of β ARs and the endothelium but was determined by the type of the preconstrictor. Vasodilation by β AR agonists occurred after pretreatment of pulmonary arteries with phenylephrine and serotonin, both agonists of α ARs, but was absent after preconstriction with the thromboxane analog U46619. These data indicated α-adrenolytic activity of β AR agonists, which was confirmed by a right shift of the phenylephrine dose-response curve by TER. This effect was physiologically relevant because TER also relaxed small intrapulmonary arteries in lung slices and diminished pulmonary arterial pressure in an isolated perfused lung model under normoxia and hypoxia. Finally, TER applied as an aerosol also selectively decreased pulmonary arterial pressure without effects on systemic blood pressure and heart rate in mouse in vivo. Thus, β AR agonists display α-adrenolytic activity in pulmonary arteries ex vivo and in vivo, and may provide a novel option to reduce pulmonary arterial pressure in pulmonary hypertension.-Neumann, V., Knies, R., Seidinger, A., Simon, A., Lorenz, K., Matthey, M., Breuer, J., Wenzel, D. The β agonist terbutaline specifically decreases pulmonary arterial pressure under normoxia and hypoxia via α adrenoceptor antagonism.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1096/fj.201700684RRDOI Listing

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