- Kumar, Rahul;
- Mickael, Claudia;
- Kassa, Biruk;
- Gebreab, Liya;
- Robinson, Jeffrey C;
- Koyanagi, Daniel E;
- Sanders, Linda;
- Barthel, Lea;
- Meadows, Christina;
- Fox, Daniel;
- Irwin, David;
- Li, Min;
- McKeon, B Alexandre;
- Riddle, Suzette;
- Dale Brown, R;
- Morgan, Leslie E;
- Evans, Christopher M;
- Hernandez-Saavedra, Daniel;
- Bandeira, Angela;
- Maloney, James P;
- Bull, Todd M;
- Janssen, William J;
- Stenmark, Kurt R;
- Tuder, Rubin M;
- Graham, Brian B
Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is an obstructive disease of the precapillary pulmonary arteries. Schistosomiasis-associated PAH shares altered vascular TGF-β signalling with idiopathic, heritable and autoimmune-associated etiologies; moreover, TGF-β blockade can prevent experimental pulmonary hypertension (PH) in pre-clinical models. TGF-β is regulated at the level of activation, but how TGF-β is activated in this disease is unknown. Here we show TGF-β activation by thrombospondin-1 (TSP-1) is both required and sufficient for the development of PH in Schistosoma-exposed mice. Following Schistosoma exposure, TSP-1 levels in the lung increase, via recruitment of circulating monocytes, while TSP-1 inhibition or knockout bone marrow prevents TGF-β activation and protects against PH development. TSP-1 blockade also prevents the PH in a second model, chronic hypoxia. Lastly, the plasma concentration of TSP-1 is significantly increased in subjects with scleroderma following PAH development. Targeting TSP-1-dependent activation of TGF-β could thus be a therapeutic approach in TGF-β-dependent vascular diseases.