| Literature DB >> 28717244 |
Harsimran D Singh1,2, Itziar Otano1, Krista Rombouts2, Kasha P Singh1,3, Dimitra Peppa1, Upkar S Gill4, Katrin Böttcher2, Patrick T F Kennedy4, Jude Oben2,5, Massimo Pinzani2, Henning Walczak6, Giuseppe Fusai2, William M C Rosenberg2, Mala K Maini7.
Abstract
The TRAIL pathway can mediate apoptosis of hepatic stellate cells to promote the resolution of liver fibrosis. However, TRAIL has the capacity to bind to regulatory receptors in addition to death-inducing receptors; their differential roles in liver fibrosis have not been investigated. Here we have dissected the contribution of regulatory TRAIL receptors to apoptosis resistance in primary human hepatic stellate cells (hHSC). hHSC isolated from healthy margins of liver resections from different donors expressed variable levels of TRAIL-R2/3/4 (but negligible TRAIL-R1) ex vivo and after activation. The apoptotic potential of TRAIL-R2 on hHSC was confirmed by lentiviral-mediated knockdown. A functional inhibitory role for TRAIL-R3/4 was revealed by shRNA knockdown and mAb blockade, showing that these regulatory receptors limit apoptosis of hHSC in response to both oligomerised TRAIL and NK cells. A close inverse ex vivo correlation between hHSC TRAIL-R4 expression and susceptibility to apoptosis underscored its central regulatory role. Our data provide the first demonstration of non-redundant functional roles for the regulatory TRAIL receptors (TRAIL-R3/4) in a physiological setting. The potential for these inhibitory TRAIL receptors to protect hHSC from apoptosis opens new avenues for prognostic and therapeutic approaches to the management of liver fibrosis.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28717244 PMCID: PMC5514093 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-05845-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Expression of TRAIL-R2 on primary human HSC has pro-apoptotic function. (a) Representative FACS plots of expression level of pro-apoptotic TRAIL-R1 and TRAIL-R2 on hHSC (blue) against matched isotype control (grey). (b) Summary of expression levels of TRAIL-R1 and TRAIL-R2 on hHSC from 8 different donors (filled symbols) and LX2 (open symbols). (c) Representative FACS plot of levels of TRAIL-R2 at baseline (left), after lentiviral transduction (GFP + ) with shCTR (centre) and shTRAIL-R2 (right). (d) hHSC transduced with shCTR and shTRAIL-R2 were treated with SuperKiller TRAIL and the degree of apoptosis of transduced cells was assessed by gating on live GFP + cells that were positive for caspase-3. (e) Cumulative graph of apoptosis induction by SuperKiller TRAIL (% caspase3 + GFP + ) hHSC (filled) and LX2 (open circle) post-knockdown of TRAIL-R2 (shTRAIL-R2) compared to control- short-hairpin RNA (shCTR) transduced hHSC. Baseline levels of caspase-3 post-transduction without addition of SuperKiller TRAIL were subtracted.
Figure 2Expression of pro-apoptotic TRAIL-R2 and anti-apoptotic TRAIL-R3 and TRAIL-R4 on hHSC. (a) Percentage expression of TRAIL-R1, TRAIL-R2, TRAIL-R3 and TRAIL-R4 on in vitro cultured hHSC (filled symbols) and LX2 (open symbols). (b) Gating strategy of freshly isolated primary human HSC. All other intrahepatic populations were sequentially gated out (CD19, cytokeratin, CD68, CD146, CD14, CD45, CD3, CD56 shown here excluded from pink gates, + /− CD45 not shown) to identify quiescent hHSC, then confirmed to be negative for αSMA (red line, final histogram). (c) ex vivo expression of TRAIL-R1–4 on freshly isolated hHSC (blue) against matched isotype control (grey) from seven donors.
Figure 3Impact of knockdown of TRAIL-R3/4 on hHSC susceptibility to TRAIL-mediated killing. (a) Percentage expression of TRAIL-R3 (left graph) and (b) TRAIL-R4 (right graph) on activated hHSC (filled symbols) and LX2 (open symbols) following lentiviral vector transduction with shRNA against TRAIL-R3 or TRAIL-R4 (shTR-3, shTR-4) compared to control short hairpin (shCTR). (c) and (d) FACS plots and summary data of induction of apoptosis (caspase3+) by SuperKiller TRAIL treatment of hHSC transduced with shCTR and shTR-3, shTR-4. Baseline levels of caspase-3 post-transduction without addition of SuperKiller TRAIL are subtracted.
Figure 4Blocking TRAIL-R3/4 on hHSC increases their susceptibility to NK cell mediated apoptosis. (a) FACS plots of induction of apoptosis (caspase3+) in hHSC co-cultured with NK cells from patients with hepatitis B with or without TRAIL-R3 or TRAIL-R4 blockade. (b) Percentage apoptosis of hHSC with an isotype blocking mAb (white) or with mAb blocking TRAIL-R3 (αTR3, blue), TRAIL-R4 (αTR4, red) or combination of αTR3 and αTR4 (green bars) upon NK cell co-culture. Responders whose NK cells induced >5% more apoptosis of hHSC with one or more strategy are shown, with %caspase3 induction normalised to the positive control (SuperKiller TRAIL) to adjust for inter-donor hHSC variability.
Figure 5Relationship between expression levels of TRAIL-receptors and resistance to TRAIL-mediated apoptosis. (a) Expression levels of TRAIL-R2 (top panel), TRAIL-R3 (middle panel) and TRAIL-R4 (bottom panel) in blue against matched isotype (grey) on in vitro culture-activated hHSC from five different donors (hHSC1–5). (b) Levels of induction of caspase-3 in hHSC at baseline and on in vitro treatment with SuperKiller TRAIL. (c) Correlation of expression levels TRAIL-R4 on hHSC against their capacity to undergo TRAIL-mediated apoptosis.
Clinical characteristics of CHB patients and healthy controls.
| Age in years median (range) | Sex (female:male) | HBeAg+ | HBV DNA IU/ml median (range) | ALT IU/L median (range) | Fibrosis (severe/moderate:mild/no) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CHB patients (n = 59) | 36 (19–60) | 23:26 | 7/52 | 1,667 (not detected –100 × 106) | 49 (10–748) | 43.9:56.09 |
| Healthy Controls (n = 20) | 31 (21–35) | 9:11 | NA | NA | NA | NA |