| Literature DB >> 35111363 |
Qing Yang Yu1, Xiao Xiao Tang1,2.
Abstract
Pulmonary fibrosis, a kind of terminal pathological changes in the lung, is caused by aberrant wound healing, deposition of extracellular matrix (ECM), and eventually replacement of lung parenchyma by ECM. Pulmonary fibrosis induced by acute lung injury and some diseases is reversible under treatment. While idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis is persistent and irreversible even after treatment. Currently, the pathogenesis of irreversible pulmonary fibrosis is not fully elucidated. The known factors associated with the development of irreversible fibrosis include apoptosis resistance of (myo)fibroblasts, dysfunction of pulmonary vessel, cell mitochondria and autophagy, aberrant epithelia hyperplasia and lipid metabolism disorder. In this review, other than a brief introduction of reversible pulmonary fibrosis, we focus on the underlying pathogenesis of irreversible pulmonary fibrosis from the above aspects as well as preclinical disease models, and also suggest directions for future studies. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: irreversibility; lung; pathogenesis; pulmonary fibrosis
Year: 2022 PMID: 35111363 PMCID: PMC8782547 DOI: 10.14336/AD.2021.0730
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aging Dis ISSN: 2152-5250 Impact factor: 6.745
Inclusion criteria for patients with PF-ILD in clinical practice.
| Project | Inclusion criteria | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
| Nintedanib in PF-ILD | •Relative decline of FVC predicted ≥10% | [ |
| Pirfenidone in unclassifiable PF-ILD (NCT03099187) | •Absolute decline of FVC >5% predicted or worsening symptoms not due to cardiac, pulmonary, vascular or other causes within the previous 6 months | [ |
| Pirfenidone for progressive, non-IPF lung fibrosis (RELIEF; EudraCT 2014-000861-32) | •Absolute annual decline of FVC ≥5% within 6 to 24 months | [ |
| Antifibrotic drugs in non-IPF PF-ILD | •Relative decline of FVC ≥10% | [ |
| Characteristics and outcomes of PF-ILD other than IPF (PROGRESS; NCT03858842) | HRCT shows >10% fibrosis areas and meets the following criteria for 2 years: | [ |
| Pirfenidone for Progressive Fibrotic Sarcoidosis (PirFS) (NCT03260556) | •Pulmonary function testing with CPI score ≥ 40 | - |
| Nintedanib in Progressive Pneumoconiosis Study (NiPPS) (NCT04161014) | •HRCT shows diffuse fibrosing extent >10% in lung | - |
| Allogeneic Mesenchymal Stem Cells in Rapidly Progressive Interstitial Lung Disease (NCT02594839) | •Interstitial lung disease is diagnosed based on: | - |
DLCO: diffusing capacity of the lung for carbon monoxide; FEV1: forced expiratory volume in 1 second; FVC: forced vital capacity; HRCT: high-resolution CT; PF-ILD: progressive-fibrosing interstitial lung disease; 6WWD: 6 min walk distance.
Suggested criteria or definitions of progressive fibrosis in clinical practice.
| Suggested inclusion criteria 1 for clinical practice | Ref. |
|---|---|
| Patients meeting any of the following criteria within a 24-month period may have PF-ILD: | [ |
| Suggested inclusion criteria 2 for clinical practice | Ref. |
| Patients excluded the alternative explanations such as respiratory tract infection and meeting any of the following criteria can be considered to have PF-ILD: | [ |
CPI: Composite Physiologic Index; DLCO: diffusing capacity of the lung for carbon monoxide; FVC: forced vital capacity; HRCT: high-resolution CT; PF-ILD: progressive-fibrosing interstitial lung disease.
Mechanisms of persistent pulmonary fibrosis.
| Underlying mechanisms | Model | Ref. | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Apoptosis resistance of lung fibroblasts | Nox4-Nrf2 dysregulation in lung tissue impairs the redox capacity, endowing the myofibroblasts with the senescence and anti-apoptotic phenotype, which causes persistent pulmonary fibrosis. | BLM model of aged mice | [ |
| Fas signaling dysfunction caused by down-regulation of Fas or overexpression of anti-apoptotic protein induces lung fibroblasts resistant to apoptosis and retain the pro-fibrotic phenotype. | BLM model of Fas deficiency genetic mice | [ | |
| FLIP induces IPF myofibroblasts to resist apoptosis and evade immune surveillance by activating NF-κB signaling. | IPF primary lung fibroblasts | [ | |
| Dysregulated expression of miR-34a and FLIP reduces the susceptibility of myofibroblasts to lymphocyte-mediated apoptosis and leads to persistent pulmonary fibrosis. | MiR-34a dominant negative mice, C57BL/6J wild type mice | [ | |
| HMGB1 released after lung injury induces apoptosis resistance of fibroblasts via activation of TLR4, leading to persistent pulmonary fibrosis. | Pulmonary fibrosis mouse model induced by radiation | [ | |
| Mitochondrial dysfunction | Mitochondrial dysfunction caused by stable suppression of PGC1α in IPF lung fibroblasts leads to activation of pro-fibrotic phenotype and promotes senescence of adjacent cells through paracrine manner, inducing persistent pulmonary fibrosis. | Aged | [ |
| Reduced expression of PINK1 induces mitochondrial dysfunction and release of profibrotic factors in ATIIs, increasing the susceptibility to lung fibrosis. | Wild type mice and genetic mice inoculated with MHV68; genetic mice treated with BLM | [ | |
| Pulmonary vascular dysfunction | Deficiency of eNOS caused by loss of endothelial phenotype and pulmonary vascular dysfunction leads to sustained fibroblast activation, resulting in persistent pulmonary fibrosis. | BLM model of aged mice and young eNOS-/- mice | [ |
| Chronic repeated injury suppresses the CXCR7 expression and promotes macrophage recruitment. The recruited macrophages stimulate PECEs to increase Notch ligand Jagged 1, which then elicits sustained activation of Notch signaling in perivascular fibroblasts, promoting persistent pulmonary fibrosis. | Mouse model of repeated BLM instillation | [ | |
| Aberrant epithelial hyperplasia | The deficiency of Nedd4-2 enhances MUC5B expression by increasing surface expression and activity of ENaC in airway epithelia cells, inducing progressive pulmonary fibrosis via impaired mucociliary clearance and dysregulation of TGF-β signaling. | Conditional deletion of Nedd4-2 genetic mice | [ |
| Airway mucociliary dysfunction caused by high concentration of MUC5B in airways may be highly correlated with the persistent development of pulmonary fibrosis. | Mouse model of repeated BLM instillation | [ | |
| Lipid metabolic disturbance | ApoE binds to collagen I and mediates collagen phagocytosis via low-density lipoprotein receptor associated protein 1 (LRP1), promoting resolution of pulmonary fibrosis. While loss of ApoE leads to dysfunction of collagen phagocytosis, inducing persistent fibrosis. | ApoE-/- mouse model | [ |
| Autophagy dysfunction | Autophagy dysfunction in IPF lung fibroblasts induces persistent activation of mTOR, which contributes to the apoptosis resistance of lung fibroblasts. | Primary human lung fibroblasts | [ |
| Loss of autophagy gene ATG7 in endothelial cells induces EndMT and activates the TGF-β signaling pathway, aggravating pulmonary fibrosis. | EC-ATG-/- mice | [ |
ApoE: Apolipoprotein E; BLM: bleomycin; CXCR7: chemokine (C-X-C motif) receptor 7; eNOS: endothelial nitric oxide synthase; FLIP: FLICE like inhibitory protein; HMGB1: high mobility group box 1 protein; LRP1: lipoprotein receptor associated protein 1; MUC5B: Mucin 5B; mTOR: the mammalian target of rapamycin; NOX4: NADPH oxidase 4; Nrf2: NFE2-related factor 2; PECEs; PGC1α: Peroxisome proliferator activated receptor gamma co-activator 1-alpha; PINK1: PTEN-induced putative kinase 1; TLR4: Toll like receptor 4.
Figure 1.Schematic representation of the cellular events and basic mechanisms in persistent pulmonary fibrosis and fibrosis resolution. Alveolar epithelial damage causes recruitment of fibroblasts, which is activated by TGF-β, leading to collagen deposition and organ fibrosis. Fibrosis can be persistent, or eventually resolve via wound healing and lung regeneration. With normal collagen clearance and fibroblast apoptosis, fibrosis lesion in the lung is possible to resolve spontaneously. On the contrary, abnormal epithelial hyperplasia, fibroblast apoptosis resistance and collagen clearance failure caused by aberrant wound healing and pulmonary vascular dysfunction may lead to persistent pulmonary fibrosis.
Figure 2.Possible pathogenesis of persistent pulmonary fibrosis. On the one hand, lung injury induces fibroblast recruitment, leading to collagen deposition and fibrosis. On the other hand, the incomplete differentiation of alveolar epithelia may result in aberrant alveolar epithelial hyperplasia and mucin overproduction, which may destroy the wound healing and aggravate pulmonary fibrosis. Besides, pulmonary vascular dysfunction caused by the loss of endothelia phenotype and high vascular permeability may induce aberrant vascular remodeling, which further enlarges the fibrosis lesion and results in the persistent and progressive development of pulmonary fibrosis.