| Literature DB >> 26539479 |
Coline H M van Moorsel1, Thijs W Hoffman2, Aernoud A van Batenburg2, Dymph Klay2, Joanne J van der Vis3, Jan C Grutters1.
Abstract
Pulmonary fibrosis is the main cause of severe morbidity and mortality in idiopathic interstitial pneumonias (IIP). In the past years, there has been major progress in the discovery of genetic factors that contribute to disease. Genes with highly penetrant mutations or strongly predisposing common risk alleles have been identified in familial and sporadic IIP. This review summarizes genes harbouring causative rare mutations and replicated common predisposing alleles. To date, rare mutations in nine different genes and five risk alleles fulfil this criterion. Mutated genes represent three genes involved in surfactant homeostasis and six genes involved in telomere maintenance. We summarize gene function, gene expressing cells, and pathological consequences of genetic alterations associated with disease. Consequences of the genetic alteration include dysfunctional surfactant processing, ER stress, immune dysregulation, and maintenance of telomere length. Biological evidence shows that these processes point towards a central role for alveolar epithelial type II cell dysfunction. However, tabulation also shows that function and consequence of most common risk alleles are not known. Most importantly, the predisposition of the MUC5B risk allele to disease is not understood. We propose a mechanism whereby MUC5B decreases surface tension lowering capacity of alveolar surfactant at areas with maximal mechanical stress.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26539479 PMCID: PMC4619788 DOI: 10.1155/2015/304186
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Mutated genes in IIP, expressing pulmonary cells, function, and mutational consequences.
| Gene | Expressing cells in lung | Gene function | Mutated domain | Effect of mutation | Pathological process |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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AEC type II [ |
Component of surfactant fluid | Linker domain associates with LB [ |
Toxic gain of function [ | Alteration of trafficking, dysregulation of proteostasis [ |
| C-terminal BRICHOS domain folded in ER and GA [ |
ER stress and UPR upregulation [ | ||||
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| AEC type II | Collectin (to modulate innate and adaptive immunity) [ | Carbohydrate-recognition domain [ | Toxic gain of function [ | Increase of ER stress [ |
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| AEC type II [ | Limiting membrane protein of lamellar body [ | Intracellular loop, extracellular domain 2 [ | Loss of function | Abnormal surfactant processing/trafficking [ |
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| AEC type II [ | Enzyme in telomerase complex maintaining telomere length [ | All [ | Haploinsufficiency [ | Telomere shortening [ |
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| AEC type II [ | Template in telomerase complex [ | Pseudoknot, CR4-CR5, and ScaRNA domains [ | Haploinsufficiency [ | Telomere shortening [ |
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| Lung tissue [ | Dyskerin (stabilizes template in telomerase complex) [ | Near RNA-binding domain [ | X-linked loss of function [ | Telomere shortening [ |
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| Lung tissue [ | Telomere maintenance by shelterin complex [ | Exon 6 residues 269–298 [ | Dominant negative [ | Telomere shortening [ |
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| Not detectable in lungs [ | DNA helicase, telomere T-loop, and G4 unwinding [ | Various domains, that is, helicase and harmonin [ | Haploinsufficiency [ | Telomere shortening [ |
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| Lung tissue [ | Exoribonuclease controls mRNA stability [ | Mainly CAF1 ribonuclease domain [ | Haploinsufficiency [ | Telomere shortening [ |
Gene function suggested to be involved in IIP pathogenesis.
Genes with polymorphisms predisposing to IIP in multiple studies, expressing pulmonary cells, function, and mutational consequences.
| Gene | Expressing cells in lung | Gene function | Risk allele | Effect of risk allele | Cellular consequence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Bronchus epithelium [ | Inhibitor of proinflammatory effect of IL-1 | VNTR | Decreased expression [ | Increase of IL-1 |
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| AEC type II [ | Enzyme in telomerase complex maintaining telomere length [ | rs2736100 major A allele [ | ? | ? |
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| Airway submucosal glands [ | Influence on rheological properties of airway mucus, mucociliary transport, and airway defense [ | rs35705950 minor T allele [ | Expression ↑ [ | Lower bacterial burden [ |
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| Not detected in human lung [ | ? | rs6793295 minor C allele [ | ? | ? |
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| Lung tissue [ | ? | rs2609255 minor G allele [ | ? | ? |
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| ? | Mitochondrial matrix enzyme involved in leucine catabolism [ | rs2034650 major T allele [ | ? | ? |
#Pooled meta-analysis of five independent cohorts [74–77].
Figure 1Hypothesized scheme of increased mechanical stress in MUC5B risk allele carriers. At areas with maximal mechanical stress in the lung, optimal surface tension lowering capacity of alveolar surfactant fluid is required. Through breathing mechanics admixture of alveolar and airway surfactant occurs. Increased amounts of MUC5B protein in MUC5B risk allele carriers have detrimental effect on surface tension lowering capacity of the alveolar surfactant fluid. In case of suboptimal surfactant, inflation requires increased traction on the alveolar wall and induces epithelial damage. Alveolar repair causes high epithelial cell turnover with consequent critical shortening of telomeres, which in turn induce senescence of alveolar epithelial type II cells.