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Pulmonary Hypertension and ATP-Sensitive Potassium Channels

2019; Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; Volume: 74; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1161/hypertensionaha.119.12992

ISSN

1524-4563

Autores

Conor McClenaghan, Kel Vin Woo, Colin G. Nichols,

Tópico(s)

Ion channel regulation and function

Resumo

HomeHypertensionVol. 74, No. 1Pulmonary Hypertension and ATP-Sensitive Potassium Channels Free AccessReview ArticlePDF/EPUBAboutView PDFView EPUBSections ToolsAdd to favoritesDownload citationsTrack citationsPermissions ShareShare onFacebookTwitterLinked InMendeleyReddit Jump toFree AccessReview ArticlePDF/EPUBPulmonary Hypertension and ATP-Sensitive Potassium ChannelsParadigms and Paradoxes Conor McClenaghan, Kel Vin Woo and Colin G. Nichols Conor McClenaghanConor McClenaghan From the Department of Cell Biology and Physiology, and Center for the Investigation of Membrane Excitability Diseases (CIMED), Washington University, St Louis, MO (C.M., C.G.N.) , Kel Vin WooKel Vin Woo Department of Pediatrics, Division of Cardiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, MO (K.V.W.). and Colin G. NicholsColin G. Nichols Correspondence to Colin G. Nichols, Washington University School of Medicine, Box 8228, 660 S Euclid Ave, St Louis, MO 63110. Email E-mail Address: [email protected] From the Department of Cell Biology and Physiology, and Center for the Investigation of Membrane Excitability Diseases (CIMED), Washington University, St Louis, MO (C.M., C.G.N.) Originally published28 May 2019https://doi.org/10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.119.12992Hypertension. 2019;74:14–22Other version(s) of this articleYou are viewing the most recent version of this article. Previous versions: May 28, 2019: Ahead of Print Clinical Picture and Genetic Basis of Pulmonary HypertensionPulmonary hypertension (PH) is a rare but progressive and devastating clinical problem, associated with 6.5 in 100 000 deaths and 131 per 100 000 hospitalizations in the United States in 2010.1,2 PH can arise from a diverse range of causes, all of which lead to increased pulmonary arterial pressure. This elevated arterial pressure consequently increases right ventricular afterload and wall stress, which results in maladaptive cardiac remodeling and ultimately right heart failure. Additional symptoms include dyspnea, fatigue, heart palpitations, and lower limb edema. PH is classified into 5 groups by The World Health Organization.3 Mechanistically, precise subclassification has been provided by continuing advances in clinical genetics, with mutations of multiple genes implicated in PH. This is most clearly evident for group 1 disease, also often referred to as pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), which can arise from mutations in multiple genes, amongst other causes. The most commonly associated gene, BMPR2, which encodes bone morphogenic protein receptor type 2 (a member of the TGF [transforming growth factor] β superfamily of receptors) is mutated in ≈70% of patients with hereditary PAH.4–7 Mutations are also found in other TGFβ superfamily genes, including ALK1 and ENG,8 in addition to the gene encoding Smad9,9 a downstream effector of BMPR2 signaling, GDF2,10 a BMPR2 ligand, and CAV1,11 which codes for caveolin-1, a scaffolding protein capable of regulating TGFβ-SMAD signaling.12 These genetic pathways present new potential therapeutic targets.Decreased potassium channel activity has long been recognized as a potential pathological substrate for PH,13–16 and recent genetic evidence for decreased potassium (K+) channel function in discrete subsets of PAH patients has been provided by the identification of loss-of-function (LoF) mutations in KCNK3, which encodes TASK-117,18, and in ABCC819, a regulatory subunit of ATP-sensitive (KATP) potassium channels. Curiously, PH is also a common feature of the rare genetic disorder Cantu syndrome (CS),20–24 which arises from gain-of-function (GoF) mutations in the KATP channel subunit genes KCNJ8 and ABCC9. This begs the question, how can both decreased and increased potassium channel activity in the cardiovascular system result in the same clinical end point?K+ Channel Loss of Function in PAHPAH is characterized by progressive vascular remodeling, involving endothelial proliferation and medial hyperplasia, which together result in narrowing of medium-to-small pulmonary arterioles and the formation of plexiform lesions in the most severe cases.25 Potassium channel activity controls the membrane potential of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs). Decreased K+ conductance will result in membrane depolarization and activation of L-type voltage-gated calcium channels, calcium influx, cellular contraction, and ultimately vasoconstriction. In addition to this canonical role in regulating vascular tone, K+ channel activity can also influence the balance of proliferation and apoptosis. For example, pharmacological activation or overexpression of voltage-gated potassium channels in pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells (PASMCs) increases apoptosis, whereas K+ channel downregulation has the opposite effect.26–28 Furthermore, mechanical forces in PASMCs during vasoconstriction also promote proliferation.13,29,30 Therefore, K+ channel activity can play distinct roles in determining vessel diameters, both by regulating vascular contractility and cellular growth.Extensive studies have identified voltage-gated K+ channels (most notably Kv1.5) as key regulators of PASMC excitability, and multiple stimuli associated with PAH, including hypoxia, anorexigenic drugs, 5-HT (serotonin) and thromboxane A2, decrease PASMC Kv currents.13,16 In addition, LoF mutations in the 2-pore domain potassium channel TASK-1 (KCNK3), which is expressed in the lungs and regulates PASMC resting membrane potential, have recently been identified as causal factors in familial and idiopathic PAH pathogenesis.17,18,31–34 This demonstrates that decreased K+ currents are not a mere epiphenomenon during PAH development and support the general hypotheses that (1) decreased K+ conductance in PASMC can cause PAH and (2) that this could potentially arise from downregulation of multiple molecularly diverse K+ channels.LoF Mutations in the KATP Channel ABCC8 Gene in PAHATP-sensitive potassium (KATP) channels represent a subfamily of potassium channels that link metabolic state to electrical activity in tissues throughout the body. KATP channel activity in vascular tissues controls vascular tone and regulates systemic blood pressure.35,36 Uniquely, KATP channels are assembled as octameric complexes of pore-forming inward rectifier K channel (Kir6.1 or Kir6.2) subunits associated with regulatory sulfonylurea receptor-1 (SUR1) or sulfonylurea receptor-2 (SUR2) subunits (Figure 1). Sulfonylurea receptor-1 is encoded by ABCC8, located on human chromosome 11, immediately preceding the gene encoding the Kir6.2 subunit (KCNJ11), whereas the paralogous ABCC9 (SUR2) and KCNJ8 (Kir6.1) gene pair are immediately adjacent to each other on chromosome 12. Several LoF mutations in ABCC8 were recently identified in 2 cohorts of pediatric- and adult-onset PAH patients.19This association is initially surprising for several reasons: First, Kir6.2/SUR1 channels are critical regulators of pancreatic β-cell excitability, and LoF mutations in ABCC8 are an established cause of congenital hyperinsulinism (CHI),37 yet ABCC8-variant PAH patients do not exhibit, or report any history of, hyperinsulinism.19 Second, extensive molecular characterization of KATP channels in smooth muscle and endothelial cells of various tissues in multiple species demonstrates a predominance of ABCC9 (SUR2) expression, not ABCC8 (SUR1) which is instead highly expressed in the pancreas and neurons.35,38–44Download figureDownload PowerPointFigure 1. Molecular basis of KATP channel activity. (A) KATP channels are generated as octamers of 4 pore-forming Kir6.x (Kir6.1 or Kir6.2) and 4 regulatory SURx (SUR1 or SUR2) subunits. B, Two pairs of genes located on human chromosome 12 (ABCC9, KCNJ8) and chromosome 11 (ABCC8, KCNJ11) encode SUR2 (C-terminally spliced to SUR2A or SUR2B) and Kir6.1, or SUR1 and Kir6.2 subunits, respectively. C indicates C-terminal; Kir, Inward rectifier subunit; P, Pore-loop; M1 and M2; NBF, Nucleotide binding fold; N, N-terminal; SUR, Sulfonylurea receptor;TMD, Transmembrane domain; - Transmembrane helix 1 and 2.Remarkably, 4 functionally-confirmed missense LoF mutations have been identified both in patients with either PAH or CHI, yet no patients have been reported with any clinical overlap between these pathologies.19 Limited penetrance of disease-associated mutations is commonly observed in heritable PAH. This suggests that causal gene variants may only predispose patients to disease which requires a second-hit genetic, developmental, or environmental insult to fully manifest, which might then explain why CHI patients with such variants do not exhibit PAH.7,19,45 Three of the variants associated with both PAH and CHI are found in homozygous or compound heterozygous CHI patients (G111R, L135V, and D1472N),19,46–48 whereas D1472N is also observed as a heterozygous variant in focal CHI (where the imprinting of the maternal allele in specific pancreatic regions unmasks paternally inherited KATP LoF mutations).49,50 The fourth (D813N) was reported in a heterozygous patient with the variant inherited from the father.51 Interestingly, imprinting of the maternal allele of chromosome 11p15, near the ABCC8 locus, has been reported in focal CHI, which may explain how paternally inherited variants have effects in specific cases.52Intriguingly, whereas SUR2 (ABCC9) is likely the predominant SUR isoform expressed in human lung tissues,42,53ABCC8 expression was reported to be upregulated in lung tissue samples from PAH patients carrying BMPR2 mutations.19 Furthermore, antibody staining identified SUR1 expression in proximal pulmonary arteries and, prominently, in alveolar macrophages.19 These data may point to currently unknown roles for SUR1-containing KATP channels in the lung and the possibility that SUR1-dependent KATP function is somehow necessary to counter PAH triggers. Detailed studies of recombinant channels show that SUR1 and SUR2 can coassemble in functional KATP channels in vitro,54–56 and both genes are expressed in certain smooth muscle tissues.42,57 It is, therefore, also conceivable that SUR1 may be functionally expressed together with SUR2 in various cells in the human lung, and that ABCC8/SUR1 expression may be upregulated in PAH, perhaps as a protective response. Consistent with such lability, SUR1 upregulation has been documented in response to hypoxia in cerebral vascular endothelial cells via HIF1 (hypoxia-inducible factor 1 α),58 a transcription factor which is also highly activated in cultured PASMCs from human PAH patients.59 If SUR1 is expressed in PASMC, either in normal physiology or in disease states, then LoF variants—resulting in decreased KATP activity—would be predicted to have a depolarizing effect on the membrane potential and thus to functionally converge with the effects of LoF mutations in KCNK3.SUR1 has also been reported to coassemble with TRPM4 nonselective pore-forming subunits to form SUR1-TRPM4 (Sur1-NCCa-ATP) complexes, in cerebral microvessels, neurons, and microglia.60–62 TRPM4 is also expressed in vascular smooth muscle,63 pulmonary smooth muscle,64 and rat airway smooth muscle,63 and thus it is possible that SUR1-TRPM4 coassembly may occur in the lung. However, the validity of the TRPM4-SUR1 association has been questioned,65 no study to date has reported SUR1-NCCa-ATP channels in the lung, and the function of any such channel in PAH pathophysiology is unknown. Importantly, TRPM4 channels are nonselective cation channels and thus would underlie depolarizing conductances. How the loss of a SUR1-dependent TRPM4–mediated depolarizing current would result in PAH is thus not clear at this time.In vitro, SUR1 expression can also mediate apoptosis induced by the SUR ligands glibenclamide, resveratrol, and 17β-estradiol.66–68 This effect does not require KATP channel function. Therefore, it is possible that PAH-associated ABCC8 mutations may reduce a KATP-independent effect of SUR1 on induction of apoptosis, which could promote the medial hyperplasia or intimal overgrowth observed in PAH.GoF Mutations in ABCC9 and KCNJ8 are associated with PHAutosomal dominant mutations in ABCC9 (SUR2) and KCNJ8 (Kir6.1) cause the complex heritable disorder, CS,69–74 characterized by hypertrichosis, distinct facies, and multiple cardiovascular abnormalities, including cardiomegaly, dilated and tortuous vasculature, pericardial effusion, and edema. Because mutations in both genes converge in a common pathophysiology, the underlying defect is GoF mutations in SUR2/Kir6.1-dependent KATP channels, and the primary cellular dysfunction is likely to be in a tissue in which both Kir6.1 and SUR2 are expressed. We have recently demonstrated that KATP channel activity in VSMC is markedly increased by CS-associated mutations in both KCNJ8 and ABCC9 in 2 novel CRISPR/Cas9 engineered mouse models which recapitulate the low systemic blood pressures and cardiac hypertrophy observed clinically.75 As both Kir6.1 and SUR2 are also expressed in the pulmonary vasculature,40–42 it is a simple prediction that CS patients will exhibit pulmonary vasodilation and hence lower pulmonary blood pressures—as is observed in the systemic circulation.21,75,76 However, CS patients present with the opposite effect, frequently demonstrating elevated pulmonary artery pressures and potentially fatal PH.22–24How Could PH Arise From KATP Channel Overactivity?A clue as to how potassium channel overactivity in CS may paradoxically cause PH is provided by studies of the effects of vasodilatory KATP channel openers (KCOs), including diazoxide and minoxidil. Adverse effects of these drugs overlap strikingly with the clinical features observed in CS—edema, pericardial effusion, hypertrichosis, reopening of the ductus arteriosus, and PH all being reported both as side effects of KCO treatment and common in CS.77–82 It has been proposed that KCOs will trigger compensatory feedback mechanisms in response to their potent systemic blood pressure lowering effect in patients.83 Such feedback includes elevated sympathetic activity and upregulation of renin-angiotensin-aldosterone axis signaling (RAAS) because of decreased renal perfusion. Activation of RAAS leads to elevated salt and water retention, and blood plasma volume expansion (hypervolemia) which helps to normalize systemic blood pressure. However, it is also recognized that elevated RAAS can contribute to the development of PH and that inhibition of this action via ACE (angiotensin-converting enzyme) inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers can reverse hypoxia- and monocrotaline-induced PH in rats.84–87 In animal models, chronic minoxidil treatment results in blood volume expansion and cardiac hypertrophy in spontaneously hypertensive88 and in normotensive rats.89 Left and right ventricular hypertrophy are observed in parallel with increased plasma renin activity90 and prevented by administration of the angiotensin receptor blocker losartan. This suggests that RAAS is a critical factor in the cardiac hypertrophy induced by chronic KCO administration. We, therefore, hypothesize that KCO-induced PH arises due to volume-overload of the pulmonary circulation, downstream of RAAS upregulation. Notably, diazoxide, which is used to treat hyperinsulinism by activating pancreatic KATP channels, also promotes vasodilation via vascular KATP activation and has been reported to cause PH in patients.78,79 For this reason, diazoxide is often coadministered with diuretic drugs to counteract adverse effects associated with fluid retention.91–93Congenital Defects in CS May Contribute to PHLeft heart disease can lead to group 2 PH. Chronic left ventricular systolic dysfunction, left-sided valvular disease, or congenital heart defects, can all cause PH, and it is possible that in certain CS patients various structural cardiovascular abnormalities may contribute to PH. Reported CS abnormalities include persistent patent ductus arteriosus and persistence of other fetal circulation, aortopulmonary collaterals, aortic root dilation, and aortic valve defects, stenosis, and regurgitation.21,22,72 Constitutive dilation of the aortic root is observed in both CS patients and Cantu mice, which results in aortic regurgitation and aortic valve defects which can cause group 2 PH.75 Additionally, if not corrected in a timely manner, patent ductus arteriosus can lead to PH and progress irreversibly to Eisenmenger Syndrome.94–96Many CS patients are born prematurely.21 Extreme prematurity may also lead to bronchopulmonary dysplasia and cause group 3 hypoxia-induced PH.23,97 Pulmonary venous occlusion was reported in a single CS case.22 The highly tortuous vasculature in CS is suggestive of abnormal development, which may result in malformed vessels such as the pulmonary venous occlusion reported by Kobayashi et al.22 Furthermore, CS patients frequently present with high-output hypertrophic hearts.69 As discussed above, we hypothesize that these structural and functional changes arise secondary to KATP GoF–induced vasodilation to compensate for lowered systemic blood pressure.75 Elevation of stroke volume results in increased pulmonary artery pressures, as is observed in healthy individuals in exercise,98,99 and may, therefore, also contribute to the chronically elevated pulmonary pressures in CS patients.Thus, there are multiple potential structural, hemodynamic, and neurohumoral factors which may contribute to PH in CS patients, all of which may be secondary to GoF of KATP channels and consequent vasodilation in the systemic vasculature.KATP Dysfunction and PH: Smooth Muscle and Endothelial Contributions?There are key roles for both smooth muscle and endothelial KATP channels in regulating vascular function. Unlike in excitable VSMCs, where KATP channel activation results in decreased calcium influx via voltage-gated calcium channels, KATP activation causes hyperpolarization in nonexcitable endothelial cells, increasing the driving force for Ca2+ influx through receptor- and store-operated channels, and thereby increases intracellular calcium.100 As intracellular calcium critically regulates endothelial function, including mediator release, KATP activity could clearly affect endothelial physiology and the vasodilatory effects of shear stress, adenosine, and hypoosmolarity have been attributed in part to activation of endothelial KATP channels.101–103KATP expression has been demonstrated in pulmonary artery endothelial cells, where it is regulated by shear stress,104,105 but endothelial KATP function has mostly been studied outside of the pulmonary vasculature. Interestingly, coronary vasospasm has been reported in both Kir6.1 and SUR2 null mice.106,107 This phenotype reportedly persists in SUR2 knockout mice even when SUR2B is transgenically overexpressed specifically in smooth muscle, suggesting that vasospasm may arise from nonsmooth muscle dysfunction.108 Consistent with this, endothelial-specific expression of dominant-negative KATP subunits results in increased coronary perfusion pressure due to increased endothelin-1 secretion from ECs.109 This was not observed following conditional deletion of Kir6.1 in endothelial cells (where Kir6.2 expression may remain) which did, however, impair hypoxia-induced vasorelaxation in the coronary circulation.43If these features are conserved in the pulmonary vasculature, it is conceivable that decreased pulmonary endothelial KATP activity could promote pulmonary vasoconstriction. In addition, the KCO nicorandil has recently been shown to reduce lipopolysaccharide-induced inflammation (via decreased reactive oxygen species generation) and monocrotaline-induced damage in pulmonary artery endothelial cells, pointing to a protective role of KATP activity in the pulmonary endothelium.110,111 However, as Kir6.2, Kir6.1, and SUR2B are the major subunits expressed in vascular endothelial cells,112 there is no simple rationale for why either endothelial SUR1 LoF or SUR2 GoF mutations should be associated with PH. Studies of the effects of GoF in pulmonary endothelium (and vascular endothelium in general) are lacking and could provide telling novel insights.Linking KATP Channel Dysfunction to PAH and CS-Associated PHClearly much remains to be elucidated about how LoF mutations in ABCC8 result in PAH, whereas GoF mutations in KCNJ8 and ABCC9 cause PH in CS. In the case of ABCC8 LoF, insights may be gleaned from studies of knockout mice.113ABCC8 null and LoF transgenic mice exhibit abnormalities in insulin secretion and glucose intolerance,113,114 but to date, there is little insight into cardiovascular dysfunction or remodeling. There are many examples of murine models providing novel insights into PAH pathophysiology (reviewed in Gomez-Arroyo et al,115 Das et al,116 and Colvin et al117), but in some cases, species-specific differences in pulmonary physiology can result in failures of mouse models to recapitulate human disease. For example, KCNK3 knockout mice do not exhibit right ventricular hypertrophy or pulmonary vasculature remodeling, despite strong genetic evidence for the role of KCNK3 LoF in human disease.7,17,32,33,118,119 Recently, we demonstrated that knock-in of CS-causing mutations into the endogenous KCNJ8 and ABCC9 loci in mice results in vasodilation, decreased systemic blood pressure, and pronounced cardiac hypertrophy—mirroring clinical observations.75 These Cantu mice, therefore, provide a faithful model of key cardiovascular abnormalities in patients and allow for investigation of pathophysiological mechanisms. The effects of KATP GoF on pulmonary vascular physiology in mice remain to be established. Based on the studies of KATP channel activating drugs in rodents, we hypothesize that KATP GoF will trigger RAAS activation and blood volume expansion, which may precipitate volume-overload of the pulmonary circulation in Cantu mice.In addition to global knockout mice, insights to the role of KATP in cardiovascular system have been provided by mouse models either expressing dominant-negative KATP channel subunit transgenes or floxed alleles, which allow for inducible and tissue-specific downregulation of KATP channel activity.35,36,43,106,107,109 Meanwhile, overexpression of GoF Kir6.1 mutant subunits in both vascular smooth muscle and cardiomyocytes has been shown to recapitulate certain features of CS.36,120 Most recently, we demonstrated that the introduction of CS-associated point mutations into the endogenous KCNJ8 and ABCC9 mouse genes recapitulates the decreased systemic vascular resistance and high-output hypertrophic hearts observed in CS75.Although the hypertensive effect of KATP knockdown in the systemic vasculature is well described,36,106,107 we are unaware of parallel in vivo studies in pulmonary vessels. The different mouse models described above provide valuable tools for future experiments to define the role of KATP dysfunction in various tissues in PH. Global SUR2 and Kir6.1 knockout mice would be expected to exhibit increased pulmonary vasoconstriction via loss of either smooth muscle or endothelial KATP function. Knockdown of overactive KATP channels in the Cantu mice in smooth muscle or endothelial cells using dominant-negative or floxed Kir6.1 alleles would establish the tissue in which KATP GoF causes PH in CS. The effect of loss of SUR1 on pulmonary physiology could be tested in global or tissue-specific SUR1 knockout.121 Together, such experiments have the potential to provide mechanistic explanations for how both loss- and GoF of KATP channels can ultimately result in PH.KATP Channels as Therapeutic Targets in PHBecause KATP activators cause vascular smooth muscle hyperpolarization resulting in vasodilation, they present an interesting potential target for PAH therapy.83,122–124 However, as noted above, classical KCOs effectively dilate pulmonary vessels, but their powerful systemic vasodilatory effects may provoke counter-productive hypervolemia and exacerbate PH with long-term administration. Thus, an important feature of an ideal vasodilatory drug for PH would be specific targeting of the pulmonary vasculature to avoid secondary compensation for associated systemic vasodilation. Vasodilators with more pulmonary-specific action, such as endothelin receptor antagonists or phosphodiesterase type 5 inhibitors may be preferable to currently available KCOs. Intriguingly, one newer KATP channel activator, iptakalim, has been reported to be a selective vasodilator acting specifically on resistance vessels in hypertensive patients, without effects on normotensive patients.125 Iptakalim has been reported to reduce hypoxia- or endothelin-induced proliferation in PASMCs126,127 and to protect endothelial function in rats,128 but whether these properties can be translated to benefit PAH patients without activation of potentially confounding secondary consequences in the long-term has not been established.Why KCOs can cause PH yet other vasodilatory drugs do not is intriguing. KCOs have long been recognized as particularly powerful vasodilatory agents, capable of reducing systemic blood pressure in patients in which other therapies have been ineffective.82,83,129,130 Therefore, perhaps the magnitude of the reflex sympathetic/RAAS activation is greater for KCOs than for other vasodilatory agents. Additionally, diazoxide and minoxidil have been shown to produce only weak venodilation (in contrast to many other vasodilatory drugs).130–132 Marked arteriolar dilation coupled with minimal venodilation, together with sympathetic/RAAS activation results in increased venous return and cardiac output, leading to increased cardiopulmonary blood volume and pulmonary arterial pressures.133 Notably, this vasoactivity profile is shared by hydralazine, another vasodilator with weak venodilatory effects that can also induce increased pulmonary pressures.133,134Whether the specific dysfunction of SUR1 can be precisely targeted in the ABCC8-variant PAH patient population remains to be seen. Diazoxide activates SUR1-containing KATP channels but exerts its vasodilatory effects via activation of SUR2B-dependent VSMC KATP channels,125 which would have undesirable systemic effects. A SUR1-specific activator might, therefore, be desirable, to avoid systemic vasodilation. A recently identified novel SUR1-selective activator, reported by Raphemot et al,135 may prove a useful experimental tool for dissecting SUR1-specific dysfunction, without targeting SUR2-containing channels. Importantly, however, any SUR1-selective activator would also activate pancreatic KATP channels, potentially decreasing β-cell excitability and insulin secretion, and thus hyperglycemic effects would have to be carefully monitored.Conversely, directly targeting KATP GoF using inhibitors represents a potential strategy for treating cardiovascular pathologies in CS or related pathologies. The potent second-generation sulfonylureas, including glibenclamide, and glinidies, such as repaglinide, inhibit both pancreatic and cardiovascular KATP channels.136 As their name suggests, the SUR domain contains the binding site for sulfonylureas, which was recently resolved in cryo-EM structures of Kir6.2/SUR1 channels bound by glibenclamide.137 The sensitivity of pancreatic/neuronal channels (Kir6.2/SUR1) for sulfonylurea inhibition is significantly higher than SUR2-containing channels in vitro.136,138,139 Thus, it would be expected that higher doses than are used in the treatment of diabetes might be required to effectively target cardiovascular KATP channels in CS. Furthermore, certain disease-causing GoF mutations in KATP channels can reduce sulfonylurea sensitivity, and thus the drugs may not be efficacious in specific patients.140,141 However, significant sensitivity is retained for multiple other CS mutations, and thus, KATP inhibitors may serve as effective therapies for many CS patients.142As detailed above, the complex cardiopulmonary abnormalities in CS seem to arise from a primary dysfunction of vascular smooth muscle channels which could, therefore, represent the ideal target for a pharmacotherapy.75 We predict that inhibiting VSMC KATP GoF in the systemic circulation will attenuate the primary systemic vasodilation, which will, in turn, inhibit the secondary RAAS activation, predicted hypervolemia and PH. Cantu mice represent a key tool for investigating the pathophysiological mechanisms underlying PH in CS and for determining the preclinical efficacy of potential therapies.SummaryRecent advances in medical genetics have demonstrated that both LoF and GoF mutations in genes encoding KATP channel subunits can result in PH. Just how LoF mutations in ABCC8 result in PAH is currently poorly understood, but, in general, decreased K+ channel activity is associated with vasoconstriction and proliferation of pulmonary artery smooth muscle and endothelial cells. Conversely, GoF mutations in ABCC9 and KCNJ8 cause CS, which is associated with multiple cardiovascular abnormalities including PH, which potentially arises as a secondary consequence of systemic vasodilation. Although there are currently no directed therapies for these pathologies, mechanistic insights to the precise consequences of KATP channel dysfunction will be provided by appropriate animal models, and novel insights to channel-dependent PH pathophysiology will then facilitate targeted therapies for distinct patient subsets.Download figureDownload PowerPointFigure 2. Hypothesized mechanisms of KATP-induced pulmonary hypertension (A) Schematic of cardiovascular system indicates normal pressures (grey) in systemic circulation and low pressures (blue) in pulmonary circulation resulting from normal pumping from the left (L) and right (R) heart, respectively. Loss-of-function of SUR1-dependent KATP (or other K) channels in pulmonary circulation may directly result in inappropriate pulmonary vasoconstriction and hypertension (red). (B) Gain-of

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