| Literature DB >> 33357457 |
Yutian Chen1, Qiang Pu2, Yongyuan Ma1, Hua Zhang1, Tinghong Ye1, Chengjian Zhao1, Xiaojuan Huang1, Yafeng Ren1, Lina Qiao1, Han-Min Liu1, Charles T Esmon3, Bi-Sen Ding4, Zhongwei Cao5.
Abstract
Regenerative capacity is frequently impaired in aged organs. Stress to aged organs often causes scar formation (fibrosis) at the expense of regeneration. It remains to be defined how hematopoietic and vascular cells contribute to aging-induced regeneration to fibrotic transition. Here, we find that aging aberrantly reprograms the crosstalk between hematopoietic and vascular cells to impede the regenerative capacity and enhance fibrosis. In aged lung, liver, and kidney, induction of Neuropilin-1/hypoxia-inducible-factor 2α (HIF2α) suppresses anti-thrombotic and anti-inflammatory endothelial protein C receptor (EPCR) pathway, leading to formation of pro-fibrotic platelet-macrophage rosette. Activated platelets via supplying interleukin 1α synergize with endothelial-produced angiocrine chemokine to recruit fibrogenic TIMP1high macrophages. In mouse models, genetic targeting of endothelial Neuropilin-1-HIF2α, platelet interleukin 1α, or macrophage TIMP1 normalized the pro-fibrotic hematopoietic-vascular niche and restored the regenerative capacity of old organs. Targeting of aberrant endothelial node molecules might help propel "regeneration without scarring" in the repair of multiple organs.Entities:
Keywords: aging; endothelial cell; endothelial protein C receptor; hypoxia-inducible factor 2 alpha; interleukin-1alpha; liver fibrosis; lung fibrosis; macrophage; neuropilin1; platelet; vascular niche
Year: 2020 PMID: 33357457 DOI: 10.1016/j.cmet.2020.11.019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Metab ISSN: 1550-4131 Impact factor: 27.287