| Literature DB >> 27006447 |
Katharine E Black1, Evgeny Berdyshev2, Gretchen Bain3, Flavia V Castelino4, Barry S Shea5, Clemens K Probst1, Benjamin A Fontaine1, Irina Bronova2, Lance Goulet3, David Lagares1, Neil Ahluwalia1, Rachel S Knipe1, Viswanathan Natarajan6, Andrew M Tager1.
Abstract
Lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) is an important mediator of pulmonary fibrosis. In blood and multiple tumor types, autotaxin produces LPA from lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC) via lysophospholipase D activity, but alternative enzymatic pathways also exist for LPA production. We examined the role of autotaxin (ATX) in pulmonary LPA production during fibrogenesis in a bleomycin mouse model. We found that bleomycin injury increases the bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid levels of ATX protein 17-fold. However, the LPA and LPC species that increase in BAL of bleomycin-injured mice were discordant, inconsistent with a substrate-product relationship between LPC and LPA in pulmonary fibrosis. LPA species with longer chain polyunsaturated acyl groups predominated in BAL fluid after bleomycin injury, with 22:5 and 22:6 species accounting for 55 and 16% of the total, whereas the predominant BAL LPC species contained shorter chain, saturated acyl groups, with 16:0 and 18:0 species accounting for 56 and 14% of the total. Further, administration of the potent ATX inhibitor PAT-048 to bleomycin-challenged mice markedly decreased ATX activity systemically and in the lung, without effect on pulmonary LPA or fibrosis. Therefore, alternative ATX-independent pathways are likely responsible for local generation of LPA in the injured lung. These pathways will require identification to therapeutically target LPA production in pulmonary fibrosis.-Black, K. E., Berdyshev, E., Bain, G., Castelino, F. V., Shea, B. S., Probst, C. K., Fontaine, B. A., Bronova, I., Goulet, L., Lagares, D., Ahluwalia, N., Knipe, R. S., Natarajan, V., Tager, A. M. Autotaxin activity increases locally following lung injury, but is not required for pulmonary lysophosphatidic acid production or fibrosis. © FASEB.Entities:
Keywords: bleomycin; ectonucleotide pyrophosphatase/phosphodiesterase 2; lysophosphatidylcholine; lysophospholipase D; mouse model
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27006447 PMCID: PMC4871797 DOI: 10.1096/fj.201500197R
Source DB: PubMed Journal: FASEB J ISSN: 0892-6638 Impact factor: 5.191