ATP release drives heightened immune responses associated with hypertension.
Tuantuan V ZhaoYu LiXiaoli LiuShudong XiaPeng ShiLi LiZexin ChenChunyou YinMasahiro EriguchiYayu ChenEllen A BernsteinJorge F GianiBernstein E KennethXiao Z ShenPublished in: Science immunology (2020)
The cause of most hypertensive disease is unclear, but inflammation appears critical in disease progression. However, how elevated blood pressure initiates inflammation is unknown, as are the effects of high blood pressure on innate and adaptive immune responses. We now report that hypertensive mice have increased T cell responses to antigenic challenge and develop more severe T cell-mediated immunopathology. A root cause for this is hypertension-induced erythrocyte adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP) release, leading to an increase in plasma ATP levels, which begins soon after the onset of hypertension and stimulates P2X7 receptors on antigen-presenting cells (APCs), increasing APC expression of CD86. Hydrolyzing ATP or blocking the P2X7 receptor eliminated hypertension-induced T cell hyperactivation. In addition, pharmacologic or genetic blockade of P2X7 receptor activity suppressed the progression of hypertension. Consistent with the results in mice, we also found that untreated human hypertensive patients have significantly elevated plasma ATP levels compared with treated hypertensive patients or normotensive controls. Thus, a hypertension-induced increase in extracellular ATP triggers augmented APC and T cell function and contributes to the immune-mediated pathologic changes associated with hypertensive disease.
Keyphrases
- blood pressure
- hypertensive patients
- immune response
- heart rate
- high glucose
- diabetic rats
- oxidative stress
- endothelial cells
- induced apoptosis
- type diabetes
- early onset
- toll like receptor
- dendritic cells
- gene expression
- case report
- cell death
- high fat diet induced
- skeletal muscle
- weight loss
- cell cycle arrest
- lymph node