| Literature DB >> 27358914 |
David H McMillan1, Jos Lj van der Velden1, Karolyn G Lahue1, Xi Qian1, Robert W Schneider1, Martina S Iberg1, James D Nolin1, Sarah Abdalla1, Dylan T Casey1, Kenneth D Tew2, Danyelle M Townsend2, Colin J Henderson3, C Roland Wolf3, Kelly J Butnor1, Douglas J Taatjes1, Ralph C Budd4, Charles G Irvin4, Albert van der Vliet1, Stevenson Flemer5, Vikas Anathy1, Yvonne Mw Janssen-Heininger1.
Abstract
Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is a debilitating lung disease characterized by excessive collagen production and fibrogenesis. Apoptosis in lung epithelial cells is critical in IPF pathogenesis, as heightened loss of these cells promotes fibroblast activation and remodeling. Changes in glutathione redox status have been reported in IPF patients. S-glutathionylation, the conjugation of glutathione to reactive cysteines, is catalyzed in part by glutathione-S-transferase π (GSTP). To date, no published information exists linking GSTP and IPF to our knowledge. We hypothesized that GSTP mediates lung fibrogenesis in part through FAS S-glutathionylation, a critical event in epithelial cell apoptosis. Our results demonstrate that GSTP immunoreactivity is increased in the lungs of IPF patients, notably within type II epithelial cells. The FAS-GSTP interaction was also increased in IPF lungs. Bleomycin- and AdTGFβ-induced increases in collagen content, α-SMA, FAS S-glutathionylation, and total protein S-glutathionylation were strongly attenuated in Gstp-/- mice. Oropharyngeal administration of the GSTP inhibitor, TLK117, at a time when fibrosis was already apparent, attenuated bleomycin- and AdTGFβ-induced remodeling, α-SMA, caspase activation, FAS S-glutathionylation, and total protein S-glutathionylation. GSTP is an important driver of protein S-glutathionylation and lung fibrosis, and GSTP inhibition via the airways may be a novel therapeutic strategy for the treatment of IPF.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27358914 PMCID: PMC4922427 DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.85717
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JCI Insight ISSN: 2379-3708