The HS-generating enzyme 3-mercaptopyruvate sulfurtransferase regulates pulmonary vascular smooth muscle cell migration and proliferation but does not impact normal or aberrant lung development.

Nitric Oxide

Department of Lung Development and Remodelling, Max Planck Institute for Heart and Lung Research, Bad Nauheim, Member of the German Center for Lung Research (DZL), Parkstrasse 1, 60231, Bad Nauheim, Germany; Department of Internal Medicine (Pulmonology), University of Giessen and Marburg Lung Center (UGMLC), Member of the German Center for Lung Research (DZL), Justus Liebig University, Aulweg 123, 35392, Giessen, Germany; CardioPulmonary Institute, Justus Liebig University Giessen, Klinikstrasse 33, Giessen, Germany. Electronic address:

Published: February 2021

Along with nitric oxide (NO), the gasotransmitters carbon monoxide (CO) and hydrogen sulfide (HS) are emerging as potentially important players in newborn physiology, as mediators of newborn disease, and as new therapeutic modalities. Several recent studies have addressed HS in particular in animal models of bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD), a common complication of preterm birth where oxygen toxicity stunts lung development. In those studies, exogenous HS attenuated the impact of oxygen toxicity on lung development, and two HS-generating enzymes were documented to affect pulmonary vascular development. HS is directly generated endogenously by three enzymes, one of which, 3-mercaptopyruvate sulfurtransferase (MPST), has not been studied in the lung. In a hyperoxia-based animal model of BPD, oxygen exposure deregulated MPST expression during post-natal lung development, where MPST was localized to the smooth muscle layer of the pulmonary vessels in developing lungs. siRNA-mediated abrogation of MPST expression in human pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells in vitro limited baseline cell migration and cell proliferation, without affecting apoptosis or cell viability. In vivo, MPST was dispensable for normal lung development in Mpstmice, and MPST did not contribute to stunted lung development driven by hyperoxia exposure, assessed by design-based stereology. These data demonstrate novel roles for MPST in pulmonary vascular smooth muscle cell physiology. The potential caveats of using Mpst mice to study normal and aberrant lung development are also discussed, highlighting the possible confounding, compensatory effects of other HS-generating enzymes that are present alongside MPST in the smooth muscle compartment of developing pulmonary vessels.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.niox.2020.12.002DOI Listing

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