Innovative Anti-Inflammatory and Pro-resolving Strategies for Pulmonary Hypertension: High Blood Pressure Research Council of Australia Award 2019
journal contribution
posted on 2025-05-20, 04:05authored byTara E. Scott, Cheng Xue Qin, Grant DrummondGrant Drummond, Adrian J. Hobbs, Barbara K. Kemp-Harper
Pulmonary hypertension is a rare, ostensibly incurable, and etiologically diverse disease with an unacceptably high 5-year mortality rate (≈50%), worse than many cancers. Irrespective of pathogenic origin, dysregulated immune processes underlie pulmonary hypertension pathobiology, particularly pertaining to pulmonary vascular remodeling. As such, a variety of proinflammatory pathways have been mooted as novel therapeutic targets. One such pathway involves the family of innate immune regulators known as inflammasomes. In addition, a new and emerging concept is differentiating between anti-inflammatory approaches versus those that promote pro-resolving pathways. This review will briefly introduce inflammasomes and examine recent literature concerning their role in pulmonary hypertension. Moreover, it will explore the difference between inflammation-suppressing and pro-resolution approaches and how this links to inflammasomes. Finally, we will investigate new avenues for targeting inflammation in pulmonary hypertension via more targeted anti-inflammatory or inflammation resolving strategies.
Funding
T.E. Scott was supported by an Australia Government Research Training Program (RTP) PhD scholarship (22591001) and a Commonwealth Scholarship Commission, United Kingdom, Split-Site PhD Scholarship (AUCR-2017-47). C.X. Qin is supported by a National Heart Foundation Future Leader Fellowship. This work was supported, in part, by the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) of Australia (to C.X. Qin, APP1187989). G.R. Drummond is supported by the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) of Australia (GNT1143674). A.J. Hobbs is supported by BHF Program grant RG/16/7/32357.