| Literature DB >> 34207528 |
Tanyalak Parimon1,2, Miriam S Hohmann1, Changfu Yao1.
Abstract
Pulmonary fibrosis is a chronic and fatal lung disease that significantly impacts the aging population globally. To date, anti-fibrotic, immunosuppressive, and other adjunct therapy demonstrate limited efficacies. Advancing our understanding of the pathogenic mechanisms of lung fibrosis will provide a future path for the cure. Cellular senescence has gained substantial interest in recent decades due to the increased incidence of fibroproliferative lung diseases in the older age group. Furthermore, the pathologic state of cellular senescence that includes maladaptive tissue repair, decreased regeneration, and chronic inflammation resembles key features of progressive lung fibrosis. This review describes regulatory pathways of cellular senescence and discusses the current knowledge on the senescence of critical cellular players of lung fibrosis, including epithelial cells (alveolar type 2 cells, basal cells, etc.), fibroblasts, and immune cells, their phenotypic changes, and the cellular and molecular mechanisms by which these cells contribute to the pathogenesis of pulmonary fibrosis. A few challenges in the field include establishing appropriate in vivo experimental models and identifying senescence-targeted signaling molecules and specific therapies to target senescent cells, known collectively as "senolytic" or "senotherapeutic" agents.Entities:
Keywords: cellular senescence; lung fibrosis; pathogenesis
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34207528 PMCID: PMC8227105 DOI: 10.3390/ijms22126214
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Regulatory molecular signaling pathways of cellular senescence in pulmonary fibrosis. The schematic illustrates the regulatory pathways of cellular senescence in key cellular players involved in lung fibrosis pathogenesis. AT2 = alveolar type 2 epithelial cells; PINK = PTEN-induced putative kinase 1; SASP = senescence-associated secretory phenotype; IL = interleukin; TNF-⍺ = tissue necrotic factor-alpha; ER = endoplasmic reticulum; ROS = reactive oxygen species; NOX4 = NADPH oxidase 4; PAI = plasminogen activator inhibitor; PTEN = phosphatase and tension homolog; mTOR = the mechanistic target of rapamycin; TGFβ = transforming growth factor-beta; ATM = the ataxia telangiectasia mutated; RB = retinoblastoma; PI3K = phosphoinositide 3-kinase; HAS = hyaluronan synthase-2; NF-κB = nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells; C/EBβ = CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein beta.
Animal models involved with alveolar type 2 epithelial cell senescence for lung fibrosis.
| Animal Models | Spontaneous Fibrosis | Induced Fibrosis | References |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| No | 4th-generation inbred, reduced required dose of bleomycin to induce fibrosis | [ |
|
| No | 3rd-generation enhanced fibrosis upon liposaccharide and bleomycin | [ |
| SftpcCerER; Tert flox/flox | No | Bleomycin induced enhanced fibrosis | [ |
| SftpcCerER; Trf1flox/flox | Yes | [ | |
| SftpcCerER; Trf2flox/flox | No | Increased susceptibility to bleomycin | [ |
| SftpcCerER; Grp78flox/flox | Yes | [ | |
| SftpcCerER; Sin3aflox/flox | Yes | [ | |
| mSFTPC.rtTA; | No | Bleomycin induced exaggerated lung fibrosis | [ |
| SftpcCerER; SFTPCI73T | Yes | [ | |
| SftpcCerER; SFTPCC121G | Yes | [ |