Patrick A Link, Jeffrey A Meridew, Nunzia Caporarello, Ashley Y Gao, Victor Peters, Mauricio Rojas, Daniel J Tschumperlin
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is an aggressive and, thus far, incurable disease characterized by aberrant fibroblast-mediated extracellular matrix deposition. Our understanding of the disease etiology is incomplete; however, there is consensus that a reduction-oxidation (redox) imbalance plays a role. In this study, we use the autofluorescent properties of two redox molecules, NAD(P)H and FAD, to quantify changes in their relative abundance in living lung tissue of mice with experimental lung fibrosis and in freshly isolated cells from mouse lungs and humans with IPF. Our results identify cell population-specific intracellular redox changes in the lungs in experimental and human fibrosis. We focus particularly on redox changes within collagen-producing cells, where we identified a bimodal distribution of NAD(P)H concentrations, establishing NAD(P)Hhigh and NAD(P)Hlow subpopulations. NAD(P)Hhigh fibroblasts exhibited elevated profibrotic gene expression and decreased collagenolytic protease activity relative to NAD(P)Hlow fibroblasts. The NAD(P)Hhigh population was present in healthy lungs but expanded with time after bleomycin injury, suggesting a potential role in fibrosis progression. We identified a similar increased abundance of NAD(P)Hhigh cells in freshly dissociated lungs of subjects with IPF relative to control subjects, as well as similar reductions in collagenolytic activity in this cell population. These data highlight the complexity of redox state changes in experimental and human pulmonary fibrosis and the need for selective approaches to restore redox imbalances in the fibrotic lung.
期刊介绍:
The American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology publishes papers that report significant and original observations in the area of pulmonary biology. The focus of the Journal includes, but is not limited to, cellular, biochemical, molecular, developmental, genetic, and immunologic studies of lung cells and molecules.