To the best of our knowledge, this study is the first to demonstrate TIFA protein overexpression in PBMCs of PAH patients and the significant association between TIFA protein expression and plasma levels of IL-1β and TNF-α. TIFA protein expression positively correlated with PVR, an index of PAH severity, and could facilitate PAH diagnosis along with echocardiography. Furthermore, hypertensive subjects had upregulated expression of TIFA, IL-1β, and TNF-α as compared with the healthy controls. These results suggest that subclinical inflammation not only underlies the development of PAH but also systemic hypertension. Ex vivo silencing of TIFA protein expression suppressed the secretion of IL-1β and TNF-α in PBMCs from patients with PAH or systemic hypertension. Causal-mediation analysis further suggested that the effect of TIFA protein overexpression on the development of PAH could be mediated through both IL-1β and TNF-α.
Inflammation is well known to play an important role in PAH pathogenesis. Previous studies revealed the presence of abundant inflammatory cells infiltrating the remodeled pulmonary arterioles and the contribution of elevated circulating cytokines to the underlying inflammation.[16, 17] Higher serum levels of inflammatory mediators were shown to correlate with worse hemodynamic indices,[10] and were more predictive of adverse clinical outcomes than the conventional hemodynamic parameters such as CI or mPAP.[6, 18] Although the established role of inflammation in PAH has introduced a novel therapeutic paradigm,[19] the detailed inflammatory pathways in PAH remain unclear. Studies have shown that NF-κB is involved in the pathogenesis of PAH.[20] In 12 patients with end-stage idiopathic PAH who underwent lung transplantation, NF-κB was activated in pulmonary inflammatory cells, endothelial cells, and smooth muscle cells.[14] In the present study, we demonstrated the role of TIFA protein, a transducer that sustains the positive feedback signaling in the TNF-α–NF-κB axis,[13, 20, 21] in the crosstalk between endothelial, smooth muscle, and immune cells following development of cardiovascular diseases in PAH.[22–24]
Given that the underlying autoimmune disease may confound TIFA protein expression level, we further stratified PAH patients based on their etiologies into idiopathic PAH and CTD-PAH. As expected, the levels of inflammatory factors were higher in the CTD-PAH subgroup and may potentially indicate worse outcomes than idiopathic PAH.[25] The differences in TIFA protein expression observed in our study indicate a spectrum of varying degrees of inflammation in different etiologies of PAH. The significantly higher expression of TIFA protein in idiopathic PAH also manifested the role of inflammation even in the absence of CTD.
Aside from the PAH group, we also observed higher expression of inflammatory biomarkers in hypertensive subjects than in healthy controls. Mirhafez et al. demonstrated IL-1α, interferon-γ, and IL-10 as independent predictors of higher SBP and presence of hypertension in a cross-sectional study involving 155 hypertensive patients and 148 healthy subjects.[26] In a meta-analysis of 142,640 participants, Jayedi et al. suggested circulating C-reactive protein (CRP) and IL-6 to be associated with the risk of developing hypertension.[27] Although the exact mechanism remains to be elucidated, evidence shows that oxidized lipids may trigger the formation of atherosclerotic plaques and induce cytokine production via NF-κB activation.[28] By altering endothelial function, chronically activated inflammation appears to increase arterial stiffness and contribute to the development of hypertension.[29, 30] In line with the findings, our study shows that hypertensive subjects had significant upregulation of TIFA protein expression in PBMCs as well as higher plasma IL-1β and TNF-α levels. The results not only support the role of inflammation in hypertension but also point out TIFA protein as a sensitive biomarker, adjunctive to other inflammatory mediators, to surrogate the extent of vascular remodeling underlying systemic hypertension.
The present study has several limitations. First, we reported a significant association between TIFA and PAH from a cross-sectional evaluation in a relatively small sample-sized study. Larger-scale studies with longitudinal follow-up are warranted to investigate the change in TIFA under PAH-specific treatment and to determine if it is a reliable marker to reflect PAH disease activity. Second, most patients from PAH group were women, which was compatible with the disease prevalence. Although gender was adjusted in the multivariable analysis, gender-specific variation should be considered, especially in the inflammatory signaling pathways. Third, although the present study shows that TIFA is involved in the pathogenesis of PAH, TIFA may not be specific to PAH and could also be elevated in the presence of underlying autoimmune diseases. Future studies should gather data on the associations between TIFA and other inflammatory markers, such as CRP level, and determine whether CTD-PAH patients have higher expression of TIFA protein than CTD patients without PAH.
TIFA protein expression in PBMCs is markedly increased in patients with PAH and positively correlates with PAH severity. As TIFA acts as an imperative transducer that propagates inflammatory responses by activating NF-κB signaling pathways,[13, 21, 24, 31] the study demonstrates the association between the upstream TIFA protein and the downstream plasma IL-1β and TNF-α in PAH. The findings of the present in vitro study may be considered as a promising aspect for further investigation in common animal models of PAH. In addition, the increased expression of TIFA protein in hypertensive subjects also indicates TIFA as a potentially sensitive marker of subclinical inflammation underlying the pathogenesis of PAH as well as hypertension. It is worth exploring the mechanisms of how TIFA initiates the progression of PAH and hypertension and the feasibility of TIFA as a novel therapeutic target in future studies.