| Literature DB >> 24982697 |
Talha Ijaz1, Konrad Pazdrak1,2,3, Mridul Kalita2,4, Rolf Konig2,5, Sanjeev Choudhary1,2,5, Bing Tian4, Istvan Boldogh1,2,5, Allan R Brasier2,3,4.
Abstract
A pathological hallmark of asthma is chronic injury and repair, producing dysfunction of the epithelial barrier function. In this setting, increased oxidative stress, growth factor- and cytokine stimulation, together with extracellular matrix contact produces transcriptional reprogramming of the epithelial cell. This process results in epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT), a cellular state associated with loss of epithelial polarity, expression of mesenchymal markers, enhanced mobility and extracellular matrix remodeling. As a result, the cellular biology of the EMT state produces characteristic changes seen in severe, refractory asthma: myofibroblast expansion, epithelial trans-differentiation and subepithelial fibrosis. EMT also induces profound changes in epithelial responsiveness that affects innate immune signaling that may have impact on the adaptive immune response and effectiveness of glucocorticoid therapy in severe asthma. We discuss how this complex phenotype is beginning to be understood using systems biology-level approaches through perturbations coupled with high throughput profiling and computational modeling. Understanding the distinct changes induced by EMT at the systems level may provide translational strategies to reverse the altered signaling and physiology of refractory asthma.Entities:
Keywords: EMT; Eosinophils; Inflammation; Innate immunity; NF-κB; Systems biology; TGFβ
Year: 2014 PMID: 24982697 PMCID: PMC4068075 DOI: 10.1186/1939-4551-7-13
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World Allergy Organ J ISSN: 1939-4551 Impact factor: 4.084
Figure 1Schematic view of EMT in the airway. Shown is a segment of airway epithelium and homeostatic properties affected by type II EMT. The induction of type II EMT is modulated by growth factors released from the ECM and tissue resident leukocytes (eosinophils) and results in loss of adherens junctions (aj), loss of apical-basal polarity and disruption of mucosal barrier function, enhanced ECM deposition and dysregulated innate signaling. Also, there is suppression of innate immunity in some asthmatics but the link between EMT and suppression of innate immunity needs to be explored further. TGFβ, transforming growth factor beta; FGF, fibroblast growth factor; EGF, epithelial growth factor.
Figure 2Pathways activated by TGFβ to induce EMT. An idealilzed epithelial cell before and after EMT showing the canonical (smad) and non-canonical TGFβ intracellular signaling pathways. The TGFβ signaling is upstream of the master transcriptional regulators, snail (SNAI1/2), zebra (ZEB) and Twist (Twst) that induce transcriptional reprogramming and chromatin remodeling through histone modification. Stimulation of TGFβ pathways result in repression of ECad (CADH1) and upregulation of fibronectin (FIB), collagen 1 (Col1) and α-SMA in the epithelial cell. Known interconnections with the TNF-NFκB inflammatory response are diagrammed.
Figure 3Consequences of EMT on innate signaling. The innate NFkB pathway is composed of the rapidly responding (canonical)- and the slower responding (noncanonical) pathways. The canonical pathway controls the inflammatory response, and is coupled to the noncanonical pathway through a feed-forward pathway by the synthesis of TRAF1 and NFκB2, two rate limiting factors in noncanonical pathway activation. Through epigenetic reprogramming and enhanced transcriptional elongation through the cyclin dependent kinase (CDK), the rate-limiting TRAF1/NFκB2 translation is reduced, resulting in enhanced pathway activation in EMT.
Figure 4Systems approaches to EMT. Systems biology is an iterative process of high throughput measurement in response to perturbations, leading to refinement of predictive mathematical models, developing new mechanisms and subsequent rounds of testing.