| Literature DB >> 32398133 |
Ryan Brown1, Sridesh Nath2, Alnardo Lora2, Ghassan Samaha2, Ziyad Elgamal2, Ryan Kaiser2, Clifford Taggart1, Sinéad Weldon1, Patrick Geraghty3,4.
Abstract
Dysregulated expression and activity of cathepsin S (CTSS), a lysosomal protease and a member of the cysteine cathepsin protease family, is linked to the pathogenesis of multiple diseases, including a number of conditions affecting the lungs. Extracellular CTSS has potent elastase activity and by processing cytokines and host defense proteins, it also plays a role in the regulation of inflammation. CTSS has also been linked to G-coupled protein receptor activation and possesses an important intracellular role in major histocompatibility complex class II antigen presentation. Modulated CTSS activity is also associated with pulmonary disease comorbidities, such as cancer, cardiovascular disease, and diabetes. CTSS is expressed in a wide variety of immune cells and is biologically active at neutral pH. Herein, we review the significance of CTSS signaling in pulmonary diseases and associated comorbidities. We also discuss CTSS as a plausible therapeutic target and describe recent and current clinical trials examining CTSS inhibition as a means for treatment.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32398133 PMCID: PMC7216426 DOI: 10.1186/s12931-020-01381-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Respir Res ISSN: 1465-9921
The status and pathophysiological effects of CTSS in pulmonary and extra-pulmonary diseases
| Pulmonary disease | CTSS signaling | Pathology | Potential therapeutics | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| COPD | Elevated in smokers and COPD patients Active in healthy lung at neutral pH, which could influence disease initiation | CTSS regulates lung inflammation and epithelial apoptosis CTSS levels corresponds to disease severity, i.e. FEV1/FVC and DLCO% | PP2A activators reduced CTSS expression and lung function decline in vivo | [ |
| Asthma | CTSS genetic polymorphisms are linked to susceptibility of patients to asthma | CTSS-induced atopic dermatitis in mice PAR2 pathway results in CD4+ T cell differentiation, which is also involved in MHC class II expression | Methylprednisone reduced serum CTSS levels. CTSS inhibitor decreased inflammation and the number of eosinophils | [ |
| PAH | Elevated CTSS in PAH patients and reduced elastic lamina and subsequent smooth muscle hypertrophy | Linked to atheroma formation and vascular remodeling in humans and rodent disease models. | Osthole modulated CTSS responses and reduced PAH in rats | [ |
| Cystic Fibrosis | Negative correlation with lung function | Causes epithelial activation of the sodium channel, cleavage of surfactants, inactivation of βdefensins, and mucus production | CTSS inhibitor VBY-999 decreased inflammation, lung damage and mucous plugging in the lungs, partially via inhibition of PAR2 | [ |
| Cancer | High levels of CTSS expression in circulating tumor cells of SCLC CTSS-degraded Decorin | In vivo inhibition of CTSS decreased tumor growth in colorectal tumor models but unknown in lung cancer | [ | |
| Sarcoidosis | Elevated CTSS levels in serum and histology samples | CTSS correlates with sarcoid diagnosis | [ | |
| IPF | High levels of CTSS expression | CTSS expression predicts disease progression | [ | |
| Muscle function | Targeting of CTSS may improve muscle function | [ | ||
| Sjögren’s syndrome | Elevated CTSS in patient tears | CTSS degrades tear proteins | CTSS inhibitor reduced symptoms in a mouse model | [ |
| Lupus | CTSS influences MHC class II-processing and T and B cell priming | [ | ||
| Autoimmune encephalomyelitis | Double knockout of | Double knockout of | [ | |
| Cardiovascular disease | CTSS is elevated in atheromas and in their surrounding tissues | CTSS inhibitor, RO5444101, decreased osteogenic activity, elastin degradation, plaque size, macrophage accumulation, growth differentiation factor-15, and calcification | [ | |
| Diabetes and obesity | CTSS levels reduce after gastric surgery | Orally active small-molecule CTSS inhibitors reduced hepatic glucose production | [ | |
| Pain | Elevated CTSS are observed in chronic colitis | CX3CL1/fractalkine is cleaved by CTSS resulting in the promoting of pain signaling. CTSS expression promotes itch, via PAR2/4-signaling | [ |
Fig. 1Mechanisms of CTSS regulation and function