Pulmonary symptoms of HPS patients are characterized by hypoxia and extensive capillary leakage resulting in acute bilateral pulmonary edema [
2,
5–
7,
22,
42,
45]. Hypoxia induces pulmonary epithelial and endothelial cells to secrete VEGF [
32,
34–
37,
39,
40,
46,
47], and VEGF acts on the endothelium to stimulate growth and dissociate adherence junctions between endothelial cells [
32,
36,
46,
48–
51]. This permits vascular remodeling, vessel repair, and angiogenesis, but can also locally increase capillary permeability [
32,
36,
39,
44,
46,
48,
49,
52]. A VEGF-HIF-1
α amplification loop is responsible for high-altitude-induced pulmonary edema, and over expressing VEGF in the lung causes pulmonary edema [
33–
35,
37–
40,
52,
53]. Conversely, genetic delivery of antiVEGF antibody or antagonizing VEGF responses suppresses pulmonary edema in experimental animals [
37,
54–
57].
ECMO reduces the progression of respiratory failure and the mortality of HPS from ~75% to 35–40% [
2,
22,
58] suggesting a role for hypoxia-induced VEGF in HPS edema [
34,
35,
39,
40,
47,
52,
59]. Pulmonary VEGF is associated with localized pathogenesis and as a cause of high-altitude pulmonary edema in response to reduced oxygen levels [
6,
33,
33,
35–
37,
39,
40,
47,
52]. Activated pulmonary PBMCs are increased in HPS patients and PBMCs also secrete VEGF in response to hypoxia suggesting a potential mechanism by which localized VEGF immune responses to hantavirus could contribute to disease [
5–
7,
60,
61]. Our findings indicate the presence of elevated VEGF in PEFs from severe and moderate HPS cases that are 4–10 fold above VEGF levels in patients with mild HPS and similar to PEF VEGF levels from patients with hydrostatic edema (median 799

pg/mL) or acute lung injury (median 501

pg/mL) [
39,
40,
52,
62]. Our findings also indicate that HPS patient PBMCs contain high VEGF levels at acute stages 1–5 days after hospitalization, which diminished over time in paired patient samples (Figures , and ). Although samples available were insufficient to analyze viremia here, these early VEGF responses occur with similar timing to the high-level viremia previously reported within HPS patients [
63]. Collectively, these findings suggest that the reduced mortality observed following HPS patient oxygenation may be at least partly derived from inhibiting VEGF/HIF-1
α responses which result in a concomitant reduction in hypoxia-directed pulmonary edema [
34,
35,
37,
40,
47].
VEGF acts within millimeters of its release to prevent systemic capillary permeability [
44], and serum VEGF is inactivated by binding to circulating soluble receptors [
32,
36,
39,
52]. While localized PEF and PBMCs had high VEGF levels during acute HPS stages we found that circulating plasma and serum VEGF levels were low in severe HPS patients during acute HPS stages (1–5 days after hospitalization). In contrast, circulating serum and plasma VEGF levels only increased 11–20 days after-admission (Figures , and ). Increased circulating VEGF at late times after infection is consistent with vascular remodeling and repair that occurs during recovery phases of other causes of acute pulmonary edema and may coincide with HPS convalescence [
32,
33,
36,
39,
44,
46,
48,
49,
52,
64]. These findings are similar to studies of patients with high-altitude-induced pulmonary edema where pulmonary VEGF levels are associated with acute disease and plasma levels of VEGF only become elevated during recovery [
33]. These findings suggest the direct involvement of localized PEF and PBMC VEGF responses in acute HPS pathogenesis and the potential for circulating VEGF to be a sign of patient recovery.
Hantaviruses infect endothelial cells in pulmonary capillary beds [
2] and cause hypoxia in HPS patients [
2,
5–
7,
45]. Finding increased VEGF in PEFs and PBMCs from HPS cases suggests hypoxia-induced pulmonary VEGF induction as a potential edemagenic mechanism [
33,
35,
39,
40,
46,
52]. This data is supported by
in vitro results demonstrating that hantavirus-infected endothelial cells are hyperresponsive to the permeabilizing effects of VEGF and that blocking VEGFR2-Src signaling responses inhibits permeability [
17,
18,
24,
30]. This mechanism is further linked to the ability of pathogenic hantaviruses to block
αvβ3 integrin functions, which normally restrict VEGFR2 permeabilizing responses [
18–
21,
27,
28]. Thus HPS patient hypoxia in combination with hantavirus-infected VEGF-hyperresponsive endothelial cells is likely to contribute to acute pulmonary edema. Moreover, these results suggest that pathway specific VEGF inhibitors may be clinically relevant and used in tandem with ECMO to reduce the severity of HPS.