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Vascular endothelial growth factor-D improves lung vascular integrity during acute lung injury

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Abstract

Disorders in pulmonary vascular integrity are a prominent feature in many lung diseases. Paracrine signaling is highly enriched in the lung and plays a crucial role in regulating vascular homeostasis. However, the specific local cell-cell crosstalk signals that maintain pulmonary microvascular stability in adult animals and humans remain largely unexplored. In this study, we employed single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNAseq)-based computational pipelines to systematically profile ligand-receptor (L/R) interactions within the lung microvascular niche and identified vascular endothelial growth factor-D (VEGF-D) as a key local factor with previously unrecognized barrier-protective properties in models of acute lung injury. Our scRNAseq data revealed that, under physiological conditions, soluble L/R interactions between mesenchymal cells, in particular alveolar fibroblast, and microvascular endothelial cells are predominantly associated with pathways involved in maintaining vascular integrity as compared to all other cells. Upon treatment with top identified ligands, we found that VEGF-D significantly enhanced endothelial barrier function and conferred protection against inflammatory challenges induced by tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α), interleukin-1β (IL-1β), and thrombin. This barrier-protective effect of VEGF-D was significantly attenuated by inhibition of VEGFR2, either through siRNA knockdown or pharmacological blockade using specific VEGFR2 inhibitors. Intravenous administration of recombinant VEGF-D in lipopolysaccharides (LPS)-induced acute lung injury models significantly reduced vascular permeability (7339 +/- 2510 (LPS) v.s. 5350 +/- 1821 (LPS + VEGF-D), p < 0.05), immune cell infiltration (0.791 +/- 0.199 x 106 WBC/mL (LPS) v.s. 0.540 +/- 0.190 x 106 WBC/mL (LPS + VEGF-D), p < 0.01), and pro-inflammatory markers TNF-α and IL-6 in the lung tissue. This effect was abolished in VEGFR2iECKO mice, confirming that VEGF-D mediates its effects via VEGFR2-dependent signaling. This study demonstrates an unexpected protective role for VEGF-D in promoting lung endothelial barrier integrity and suggests that paracrine signaling from the alveolar fibroblast niche contributes critically to lung capillary homeostasis.

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