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Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol (July 25, 2008). doi:10.1152/ajpheart.00127.2008
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Submitted on February 6, 2008
Revised on July 8, 2008
Accepted on July 22, 2008

Changes in the structure-function relationship of elastin and its impact on the proximal pulmonary arterial mechanics of hypertensive calves

Steven R. Lammers1, Phil Kao1, H. Jerry Qi1, Kendall Hunter2, Craig Lanning2, Joseph Albietz3, Stephen Hofmeister4, Robert P Mecham5, Kurt R. Stenmark6, and Robin Shandas1*

1 University of Colorado
2 Dept. of Pediatric Cardiology
3 University of Colorado, Denver
4 Department of Pediatrics
5 Washington University School of Medicine
6 University of Colorado, Health Science Center

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: robin.shandas{at}uchsc.edu.

Extracellular matrix remodeling has been proposed as one mechanism by which proximal pulmonary arteries stiffen during pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). Although some attention has been paid to the role of collagen and metallomatrix proteins in affecting vascular stiffness, much less work has been performed on changes in elastin structure-function relationships in PAH. Such work is warranted given the importance of elastin as the structural protein primarily responsible for the passive elastic behavior of these conduit arteries. Here, we study structure-function relationships of fresh arterial tissue and purified arterial elastin from the main, left and right pulmonary artery branches of normotensive and hypoxia-induced pulmonary hypertensive neonatal calves. PAH resulted in an average 81% and 72% increase in stiffness of fresh and digested tissue respectively. Increase in stiffness appears most attributable to elevated elastic modulus, which increased 46% and 65% respectively for fresh and digested tissue. Comparison between fresh and digested tissues shows that, at 35% strain, a minimum of 48% of the arterial load is carried by elastin, and a minimum of 43% of the change in stiffness of arterial tissue is due to the change in elastin stiffness. Analysis of the stress-strain behavior revealed that PAH causes an increase in the strains associated with the physiologic pressure range but had no effect on the strain of transition from elastin-dominant to collagen-dominant behavior. These results indicate that mechanobiological adaptations of the continuum and geometric properties of elastin, in response to PAH, significantly elevate the circumferential stiffness of proximal pulmonary arterial tissue.







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