ace-011 and Inflammation

ace-011 has been researched along with Inflammation* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for ace-011 and Inflammation

ArticleYear
Sotatercept analog suppresses inflammation to reverse experimental pulmonary arterial hypertension.
    Scientific reports, 2022, 05-12, Volume: 12, Issue:1

    Sotatercept is an activin receptor type IIA-Fc (ActRIIA-Fc) fusion protein that improves cardiopulmonary function in patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) by selectively trapping activins and growth differentiation factors. However, the cellular and molecular mechanisms of ActRIIA-Fc action are incompletely understood. Here, we determined through genome-wide expression profiling that inflammatory and immune responses are prominently upregulated in the lungs of a Sugen-hypoxia rat model of severe angio-obliterative PAH, concordant with profiles observed in PAH patients. Therapeutic treatment with ActRIIA-Fc-but not with a vasodilator-strikingly reversed proinflammatory and proliferative gene expression profiles and normalized macrophage infiltration in diseased rodent lungs. Furthermore, ActRIIA-Fc normalized pulmonary macrophage infiltration and corrected cardiopulmonary structure and function in Bmpr2 haploinsufficient mice subjected to hypoxia, a model of heritable PAH. Three high-affinity ligands of ActRIIA-Fc each induced macrophage activation in vitro, and their combined immunoneutralization in PAH rats produced cardiopulmonary benefits comparable to those elicited by ActRIIA-Fc. Our results in complementary experimental and genetic models of PAH reveal therapeutic anti-inflammatory activities of ActRIIA-Fc that, together with its known anti-proliferative effects on vascular cell types, could underlie clinical activity of sotatercept as either monotherapy or add-on to current PAH therapies.

    Topics: Animals; Disease Models, Animal; Familial Primary Pulmonary Hypertension; Humans; Hypertension, Pulmonary; Hypoxia; Inflammation; Mice; Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension; Rats; Recombinant Fusion Proteins

2022