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Aortic valve stenosis causes accumulation of extracellular hemoglobin and systemic endothelial dysfunction

Aortic valve stenosis causes accumulation of extracellular hemoglobin and systemic endothelial dysfunction
Aortic valve stenosis causes accumulation of extracellular hemoglobin and systemic endothelial dysfunction

Background: whether aortic valve stenosis (AS) can adversely affect systemic endothelial function independently of standard modifiable cardiovascular risk factors is unknown. 

Methods: we therefore investigated endothelial and cardiac function in an experimental model of AS mice devoid of standard modifiable cardiovascular risk factors and human cohorts with AS scheduled for transcatheter aortic valve replacement. Endothelial function was determined by flow-mediated dilation using ultrasound. Extracellular hemoglobin (eHb) concentrations and nitric oxide (NO) consumption were determined in blood plasma of mice and humans by ELISA and chemiluminescence. This was complemented by measurements of aortic blood flow using 4-dimensional flow acquisition by magnetic resonance imaging and computational fluid dynamics simulations. The effects of plasma and red blood cell (RBC) suspensions on vascular function were determined in transfer experiments in a murine vasorelaxation bioassay system. 

Results: in mice, the induction of AS caused systemic endothelial dysfunction. In the presence of normal systolic left ventricular function and mild hypertrophy, the increase in the transvalvular gradient was associated with elevated eryptosis, increased eHb, and increased plasma NO consumption; eHb sequestration by haptoglobin restored endothelial function. Because the aortic valve orifice area in patients with AS decreased, postvalvular mechanical stress in the central ascending aorta increased. This was associated with elevated eHb, circulating RBC-derived microvesicles, eryptotic cells, lower haptoglobin levels without clinically relevant anemia, and consecutive endothelial dysfunction. Transfer experiments demonstrated that reduction of eHb by treatment with haptoglobin or elimination of fluid dynamic stress by transcatheter aortic valve replacement restored endothelial function. In patients with AS and subclinical RBC fragmentation, the remaining circulating RBCs before and after transcatheter aortic valve replacement exhibited intact membrane function, deformability, and resistance to osmotic and hypoxic stress.

Conclusions: as increases postvalvular swirling blood flow in the central ascending aorta, triggering RBC fragmentation with the accumulation of hemoglobin in the plasma. This increases NO consumption in blood, thereby limiting vascular NO bioavailability. Thus, AS itself promotes systemic endothelial dysfunction independent of other established risk factors. Transcatheter aortic valve replacement is capable of limiting NO scavenging and rescuing endothelial function by realigning postvalvular blood flow to near physiological patterns.

 Registration: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifiers: NCT05603520 and NCT01805739.

aortic valve stenosis, endothelium, hemoglobin, magnetic resonance imaging, nitric oxide, transcatheter aortic valve replacement
0009-7322
952-965
Quast, Christine
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Bönner, Florian
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Polzin, Amin
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Veulemans, Verena
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Chennupati, Ramesh
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Gyamfi Poku, Isabella
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Pfeiler, Susanne
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Kramser, Nicolas
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Nankinova, Magdalena
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Staub, Nicole
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Zweck, Elric
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Jokiel, Juliane
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Keyser, Fabian
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Hoffe, Jasmina
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Witkowski, Sven
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Becker, Katrin
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Leuders, Pia
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Saif, Zako
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Erkens, Ralf
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Jung, Christian
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Flögel, Ulrich
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Tianai, Wang
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Neidlin, Michael
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Steinseifer, Ulrich
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Niepmann, Sven Thomas
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Zimmer, Sebastian
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Gerdes, Norbert
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Cortese-Krott, Miriam M.
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Feelisch, Martin
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Zeus, Tobias
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Kelm, Malte
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Quast, Christine
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Bönner, Florian
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Polzin, Amin
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Veulemans, Verena
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Chennupati, Ramesh
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Gyamfi Poku, Isabella
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Pfeiler, Susanne
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Kramser, Nicolas
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Nankinova, Magdalena
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Staub, Nicole
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Zweck, Elric
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Jokiel, Juliane
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Keyser, Fabian
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Hoffe, Jasmina
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Witkowski, Sven
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Becker, Katrin
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Leuders, Pia
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Saif, Zako
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Erkens, Ralf
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Jung, Christian
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Flögel, Ulrich
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Tianai, Wang
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Neidlin, Michael
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Steinseifer, Ulrich
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Niepmann, Sven Thomas
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Zimmer, Sebastian
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Gerdes, Norbert
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Cortese-Krott, Miriam M.
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Feelisch, Martin
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Zeus, Tobias
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Kelm, Malte
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Quast, Christine, Bönner, Florian, Polzin, Amin, Veulemans, Verena, Chennupati, Ramesh, Gyamfi Poku, Isabella, Pfeiler, Susanne, Kramser, Nicolas, Nankinova, Magdalena, Staub, Nicole, Zweck, Elric, Jokiel, Juliane, Keyser, Fabian, Hoffe, Jasmina, Witkowski, Sven, Becker, Katrin, Leuders, Pia, Saif, Zako, Erkens, Ralf, Jung, Christian, Flögel, Ulrich, Tianai, Wang, Neidlin, Michael, Steinseifer, Ulrich, Niepmann, Sven Thomas, Zimmer, Sebastian, Gerdes, Norbert, Cortese-Krott, Miriam M., Feelisch, Martin, Zeus, Tobias and Kelm, Malte (2024) Aortic valve stenosis causes accumulation of extracellular hemoglobin and systemic endothelial dysfunction. Circulation, 150 (12), 952-965. (doi:10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.123.064747).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: whether aortic valve stenosis (AS) can adversely affect systemic endothelial function independently of standard modifiable cardiovascular risk factors is unknown. 

Methods: we therefore investigated endothelial and cardiac function in an experimental model of AS mice devoid of standard modifiable cardiovascular risk factors and human cohorts with AS scheduled for transcatheter aortic valve replacement. Endothelial function was determined by flow-mediated dilation using ultrasound. Extracellular hemoglobin (eHb) concentrations and nitric oxide (NO) consumption were determined in blood plasma of mice and humans by ELISA and chemiluminescence. This was complemented by measurements of aortic blood flow using 4-dimensional flow acquisition by magnetic resonance imaging and computational fluid dynamics simulations. The effects of plasma and red blood cell (RBC) suspensions on vascular function were determined in transfer experiments in a murine vasorelaxation bioassay system. 

Results: in mice, the induction of AS caused systemic endothelial dysfunction. In the presence of normal systolic left ventricular function and mild hypertrophy, the increase in the transvalvular gradient was associated with elevated eryptosis, increased eHb, and increased plasma NO consumption; eHb sequestration by haptoglobin restored endothelial function. Because the aortic valve orifice area in patients with AS decreased, postvalvular mechanical stress in the central ascending aorta increased. This was associated with elevated eHb, circulating RBC-derived microvesicles, eryptotic cells, lower haptoglobin levels without clinically relevant anemia, and consecutive endothelial dysfunction. Transfer experiments demonstrated that reduction of eHb by treatment with haptoglobin or elimination of fluid dynamic stress by transcatheter aortic valve replacement restored endothelial function. In patients with AS and subclinical RBC fragmentation, the remaining circulating RBCs before and after transcatheter aortic valve replacement exhibited intact membrane function, deformability, and resistance to osmotic and hypoxic stress.

Conclusions: as increases postvalvular swirling blood flow in the central ascending aorta, triggering RBC fragmentation with the accumulation of hemoglobin in the plasma. This increases NO consumption in blood, thereby limiting vascular NO bioavailability. Thus, AS itself promotes systemic endothelial dysfunction independent of other established risk factors. Transcatheter aortic valve replacement is capable of limiting NO scavenging and rescuing endothelial function by realigning postvalvular blood flow to near physiological patterns.

 Registration: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifiers: NCT05603520 and NCT01805739.

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Quast et al-Circulation 2024-accepted author MS+Suppl - Accepted Manuscript
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e-pub ahead of print date: 5 June 2024
Published date: 17 September 2024
Keywords: aortic valve stenosis, endothelium, hemoglobin, magnetic resonance imaging, nitric oxide, transcatheter aortic valve replacement

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 509216
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/509216
ISSN: 0009-7322
PURE UUID: 844e8d3e-d582-41e6-867a-f1f4c979d740
ORCID for Martin Feelisch: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2320-1158

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 13 Feb 2026 17:35
Last modified: 14 Feb 2026 02:46

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Contributors

Author: Christine Quast
Author: Florian Bönner
Author: Amin Polzin
Author: Verena Veulemans
Author: Ramesh Chennupati
Author: Isabella Gyamfi Poku
Author: Susanne Pfeiler
Author: Nicolas Kramser
Author: Magdalena Nankinova
Author: Nicole Staub
Author: Elric Zweck
Author: Juliane Jokiel
Author: Fabian Keyser
Author: Jasmina Hoffe
Author: Sven Witkowski
Author: Katrin Becker
Author: Pia Leuders
Author: Zako Saif
Author: Ralf Erkens
Author: Christian Jung
Author: Ulrich Flögel
Author: Wang Tianai
Author: Michael Neidlin
Author: Ulrich Steinseifer
Author: Sven Thomas Niepmann
Author: Sebastian Zimmer
Author: Norbert Gerdes
Author: Miriam M. Cortese-Krott
Author: Martin Feelisch ORCID iD
Author: Tobias Zeus
Author: Malte Kelm

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