| Literature DB >> 27282780 |
Nicole Izykowski1,2,3, Mark Kuehnel4,5,6, Kais Hussein4, Kristin Mitschke4, Michael Gunn7, Sabina Janciauskiene8,5,6, Axel Haverich9,5,6, Gregor Warnecke9,5,6, Florian Laenger4,5,6, Ulrich Maus8,5,6, Danny Jonigk4,5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Organizing pneumonia is a reaction pattern and an inflammatory response to acute lung injuries, and is characterized by intraluminal plugs of granulation tissue in distal airspaces. In contrast to other fibrotic pulmonary diseases, organizing pneumonia is generally responsive to corticosteroids. However, some patients do not respond to treatment, leading to respiratory failure and potentially death (up to 15 % of patients). In order to devise new therapeutic strategies, a better understanding of the disease's pathomechanisms is warranted. We previously generated a mouse model overexpressing CCL2, which generates organizing pneumonia-like changes, morphologically comparable to human patients. In this study, we investigated whether the histopathological similarities of human and murine pulmonary organizing pneumonia lesions also involve similar molecular pathways.Entities:
Keywords: CCL2 transgenic mouse; Laser-assisted microdissection; Organizing pneumonia
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27282780 PMCID: PMC4901413 DOI: 10.1186/s12967-016-0933-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Description of inflammation- and fibrosis-associated genes investigated in human (OP and control) lungs and in transgenic and nontransgenic mice
| Gene name | Approved symbol (human/mouse) | Approved symbol (mouse) | Function |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bone morphogenetic protein 4 | BMP4 | Bmp4 | BMPs are a group of growth factors also known as cytokines and are part of the transforming growth factor beta superfamily. BMPs induce cartilage and bone formation |
| Bone morphogenetic protein receptor, type 1B | BMPR1B | Bmpr1b | On ligand binding, a receptor complex forms consisting of two type II and two type I transmembrane serine/threonine kinases. Type II receptors phosphorylate and activate type I receptors which autophosphorylate, then bind and activate SMAD transcriptional regulators |
| Chemokine (C-C motif) ligand 2 | CCL2 | Ccl2 | This chemokine is a member of the CC subfamily which is characterized by two adjacent cysteine residues. This cytokine displays chemotactic activity for monocytes and basophils but not for neutrophils or eosinophils. It has been implicated in the pathogenesis of diseases characterized by monocytic infiltrates, like psoriasis, rheumatoid arthritis and atherosclerosis. It binds to chemokine receptors CCR2 and CCR4 |
| Collagen, type III, alpha 1 | COL3A1 | Col3a1 | Collagen type III occurs in most soft connective tissues (skin, lung, uterus, intestine and the vascular system) along with type I collagen. Involved in the regulation of cortical development |
| Chemokine (C-X-C motif) ligand 12 | CXCL12 | Cxcl12 | Chemoattractant active on T-lymphocytes, monocytes, but not neutrophils. It functions as the ligand for the G protein-coupled receptor, chemokine (C-X-C motif) receptor 4, and plays a role in many diverse cellular functions, including embryogenesis, immune surveillance, inflammation response, tissue homeostasis, and tumor growth and metastasis |
| Chemokine (C-X-C motif) receptor 4 | CXCR4 | Cxcr4 | Receptor for the C-X-C chemokine CXCL12/SDF-1 that transduces a signal by increasing intracellular calcium ion levels and enhancing MAPK1/MAPK3 activation. Acts as a receptor for extracellular ubiquitin; leading to enhanced intracellular calcium ions and reduced cellular cAMP levels |
| Interleukin 6 | IL6 | Il6 | Cytokine that functions in inflammation and the maturation of B cells. In addition, it has been shown to be an endogenous pyrogen capable of inducing fever in people with autoimmune diseases or infections. The protein is primarily produced at sites of acute and chronic inflammation, where it is secreted into the serum and induces a transcriptional inflammatory response through interleukin 6 receptor alpha |
| Matrix metallopeptidase 2 | MMP2 | Mmp2 | Ubiquitinous metalloproteinase that is involved in diverse functions such as remodeling of the vasculature, angiogenesis, tissue repair, tumor invasion, inflammation, and atherosclerotic plaque rupture. As well as degrading extracellular matrix proteins, it can also act on several non-matrix proteins such as big endothelin-1 and beta-type CGRP promoting vasoconstriction |
| Protein tyrosine kinase 2 | PTK2 | Ptk2 | Non-receptor protein-tyrosine kinase that plays an essential role in regulating cell migration, adhesion, spreading, reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton, formation and disassembly of focal adhesions and cell protrusions, cell cycle progression, cell proliferation and apoptosis |
| SMAD family member 1 | SMAD1 | Smad1 | This protein mediates the signals of the bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs), which are involved in a range of biological activities including cell growth, apoptosis, morphogenesis, development and immune responses. In response to BMP ligands, this protein can be phosphorylated and activated by the BMP receptor kinase, type I. The phosphorylated form of this protein forms a complex with SMAD4, which is important for its function in the transcription regulation |
| SMAD family member 3 | SMAD3 | Smad3 | Receptor-regulated SMAD (R-SMAD) that is an intracellular signal transducer and transcriptional modulator activated by TGF-beta (transforming growth factor) and is thought to play a role in the regulation of carcinogenesis |
| Transforming growth factor, beta 1 | TGFB1 | Tgfb1 | Multifunctional protein that controls proliferation, differentiation and other functions in many cell types. Many cells synthesize TGFB1 and have specific receptors for it. It positively and negatively regulates many other growth factors. At low concentrations in concert with IL-6 and IL-21, it leads to expression of the IL-17 and IL-23 receptors, favoring differentiation to Th17 cells |
| Thrombospondin 1 | THBS1 | Thbs1 | This protein is an adhesive glycoprotein that mediates cell-to-cell and cell-to-matrix interactions. It can bind to fibrinogen, fibronectin, laminin, type V collagen and integrins alpha-V/beta-1 and has been shown to play roles in platelet aggregation, angiogenesis, and tumorigenesis |
| Tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase 1 | TIMP1 | Timp1 | Metalloproteinase inhibitor that functions by forming one to one complexes with target metalloproteinases, such as collagenases, and irreversibly inactivates them by binding to their catalytic zinc cofactor. Acts on all MMPs, except on MMP14. Also functions as a growth factor that regulates cell differentiation, migration and cell death and activates cellular signaling cascades |
| Tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase 2 | TIMP2 | Timp2 | In addition to an inhibitory role against metalloproteinases, this protein has a unique role among TIMP family members in its ability to directly suppress the proliferation of endothelial cells. As a result, the encoded protein may be critical to the maintenance of tissue homeostasis by suppressing the proliferation of quiescent tissues in response to angiogenic factors, and by inhibiting protease activity in tissues undergoing remodeling of the extracellular matrix |
Information is taken from HUGO gene Nomenclature Committee, Uniprot and NCBI-Gene
Antibodies, source and dilutions used for immunohistochemistry
| Antibody | Company | Dilution |
|---|---|---|
| BMP4 | Abcam | 1:750 |
| BMPR1B | Abnova | 1:500 |
| CCL2 | Acris Antibodies | 1:100 |
| COL3A1 | Acris Antibodies | 1:50 |
| CXCL12 | Acris Antibodies | 1:100–200 |
| IL-6 | Abcam | 1:500 |
| MMP2 | Abcam | 1:200 |
| TGFB1 | Abcam | 1:100 |
| TIMP1 | Zytomed/Emergo | 1:500 |
| TIMP2 | Abcam | 1:50 |
Fig. 1a mRNA expression of human CCL2 (hCCL2) versus murine Ccl2 (mCCL2) in murine lungs. Human CCL2 is only expressed in transgenic mice, but not in controls. The murine (endogenous) Ccl2 was expressed in both transgenic and nontransgenic animals. Log scale (y-axis). b Transgenic animals expressing hCCL2 divided into those with and without OP manifestation
Fig. 2OP lesions stained by hematoxylin and eosin (a, d), and immunohistochemically against MMP2 (b, e) and IL6 (c, f) in transgenic mice (a–c) and in human OP lungs (d–f). Histopathologically, the organizing pneumonia pattern (arrows), which is characterized by excessive intraalveolar proliferations of granulation tissue, associated with lymphocytic pneumonitis in the surrounding lung tissue, is comparable in humans and mice. Scale bars correspond to 100 µm
Fig. 3Gene expression levels of the Tgfb1/TGFB1 cascade in murine OP lesions, compared to controls. TGFB1/Tgfb1, CXCL12/Cxcl12, TIMP1/Timp1, TIMP2/Timp2, COL3A1/Col3a1 and MMP2/Mmp2 show an OP lesion-specific overexpression in both human and murine lungs. In contrast, BMP4 and BMPR1B were upregulated in human OP lesions, compared to controls, while in murine lungs both genes were downregulated. There was no significant difference in the expression level of IL6/Il6. Ctrl.—control(s)
Fig. 4Gene expression levels of the Tgfb1/TGFB1 cascade in human OP lesions, compared to controls. TGFB1/Tgfb1, CXCL12/Cxcl12, TIMP1/Timp1, TIMP2/Timp2, COL3A1/Col3a1 and MMP2/Mmp2 show an OP lesion-specific overexpression in both human and murine lungs. In contrast, BMP4 and BMPR1B were upregulated in human OP lesions, compared to controls, while in murine lungs both genes were downregulated. There was no significant difference in the expression level of IL6/Il6. Ctrl.—control(s)
Comparison of expression levels of inflammation- and fibrosis-associated genes in human and murine OP lesions
OP organizing pneumonia, ↑ upregulation (green) in OP lesions compared to non-remodeled bronchioles of hCCL2 mice without OP manifestation (OP-Ctrl.)/human controls, → no significant differences in gene expression (gray), ↓ downregulation (red) compared to non-remodeled bronchioles of hCCL2 mice without OP manifestation (OP-Ctrl.)/human controls
* p ≤ 0.05; ** p ≤ 0.01; *** p ≤ 0.001
Literature review of the investigated inflammation- and fibrosis-associated genes in bronchiolitis obliterans (BO), idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) and organizing pneumonia (OP) humans and mice
| References | Pulmonary disease: no. of cases/controls | Materials | Investigated parameters | Methods |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Magnan et al. [ | BO: 6/7 | BAL (TBB) from lung transplant recipients |
| Immunoassay for cytokine determination |
| Taghavi et al. [ | BO: 38/34 | BAL (TBB) from lung transplant patients |
| ELISA |
| Ramirez et al. [ | BO: 13/21 | BALF from lung transplant recipients | IL-1b, IL-2, IL-4, IL-5, | Multiplex Bead Immunoassay |
| Jonigk et al. [ | BO: 12/12 | Explanted lung allografts |
| RNA microarray (45 target genes) |
|
| ||||
| Majeski et al. [ | OP: | Reovirus 1/L induction of intraluminal fibrosis |
| RiboQuant multiprobe ribonuclease protection assay |
| Phillips et al. [ | IPF: 3–6 mice for each treatment group (bleomycin/saline) | Bleomycin mouse model |
| FACS, ELISA, qRT-PCR, |
| Chen et al. [ | BO: 4/4 | Heterotopic tracheal transplantation from TIMP-1 null (-/-) mutation and wild-type (TIMP-1 +/+) mice | Βeta-actin, Mmp3, Mmp7, Mmp9, Mmp12, | Immunohistochemistry |
| Xu [ | BO: 6/6 | Heterotopic tracheal transplantation |
| Immunohistochemistry |
| Vittal et al. [ | IPF: | Bleomycin mouse model |
| qRT-PCR |
| Shi et al. [ | IPF: | Bleomycin mouse model |
| Immunohistochemistry |
Significantly regulated genes are highlighted in italics
ACTB beta-actin, BAL bronchoalveolar lavage, BMP bone morphogenetic protein, BMPR bone morphogenetic protein receptor, CCL CC chemokine ligand, CD40LG CD40 ligand, Cxcr4 chemokine (C-X-C motif) receptor 4, Cxcl12 chemokine (C-X-C motif) ligand 12, ECP eosinophilic cationic protein, FAK (PTK) focal adhesion kinase (protein tyrosine kinase), FasL Fas ligand, FGF1 fibroblast growth factor 1, FOXP3 forkhead box P3, GM-CSF granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor, HLA human leukocyte antigen, IFN interferon, IL interleukin, IP10 interferon gamma-induced protein 10, LTA lymphotoxin-α, LOX lysyl oxidase, MCP1 monocyte chemotactic protein, MIP macrophage inflammatory protein, MIG (CXCL9) monokine induced by gamma interferon, MMP matrix metalloproteinase, MPO myeloperoxidase, NG neutrophilic granulocytes, PDGFB platelet-derived growth factor subunit B, PLAU plasminogen activator (urokinase), RPL13A 60S ribosomal protein L13a, sCD30 soluble CD30, SLPI secretory leukocyte protease inhibitor, Smad Sma and Mad-related protein family members, sRAGE soluble receptor for advanced glycation end products, TGF transforming growth factor, THBS1 thrombospondin-1, TIMP1 tissue inhibitor of matrix metalloproteinases 1, TNFα tumor necrosis factor, alpha, TNFSF7 TNF ligand superfamily member 7, VEGF vascular endothelial growth factor, YKL-40 chitinase-like glycoprotein