| Literature DB >> 36050716 |
Chen-Ting Hung1, Yi-Wei Tsai1, Yu-Shuo Wu1, Chih-Fan Yeh2, Kai-Chien Yang3,4,5,6,7,8.
Abstract
Fibrosis-related disorders account for an enormous burden of disease-associated morbidity and mortality worldwide. Fibrosis is defined by excessive extracellular matrix deposition at fibrotic foci in the organ tissue following injury, resulting in abnormal architecture, impaired function and ultimately, organ failure. To date, there lacks effective pharmacological therapy to target fibrosis per se, highlighting the urgent need to identify novel drug targets against organ fibrosis. Recently, we have discovered the critical role of a fibroblasts-enriched endoplasmic reticulum protein disulfide isomerase (PDI), thioredoxin domain containing 5 (TXNDC5), in cardiac, pulmonary, renal and liver fibrosis, showing TXNDC5 is required for the activation of fibrogenic transforming growth factor-β signaling cascades depending on its catalytic activity as a PDI. Moreover, deletion of TXNDC5 in fibroblasts ameliorates organ fibrosis and preserves organ function by inhibiting myofibroblasts activation, proliferation and extracellular matrix production. In this review, we detailed the molecular and cellular mechanisms by which TXNDC5 promotes fibrogenesis in various tissue types and summarized potential therapeutic strategies targeting TXNDC5 to treat organ fibrosis.Entities:
Keywords: Organ fibrosis; Protein disulfide isomerase; TXNDC5; Thioredoxin domain; Transforming growth factor-β (TGFβ)
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36050716 PMCID: PMC9438287 DOI: 10.1186/s12929-022-00850-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Sci ISSN: 1021-7770 Impact factor: 12.771
Fig. 1TXNDC5 contributes critically to the development of organ fibrosis through its PDI activity mediated by TRX domains. Global or targeted deletion of Txndc5 prevents or halts fibrosis progression, as reflected by a reduction of fibrillar collagen deposition in internal organs including heart, lung, kidney and liver
TGFβ-ATF6-TXNDC5 signaling axis triggers various downstream fibrogenic signaling pathways in different organs
| Organ fibrosis | TXNDC5 downstream signaling pathway |
|---|---|
| Cardiac fibrosis [ | 1. Non-canonical TGFβ pathway: JNK signaling |
| 2. Facilitating folding of ECM protein, such as collagen and fibronectin | |
| Pulmonary fibrosis [ | 1. Canonical TGFβ pathway: SMAD3 signaling |
| 2. Non-canonical TGFβ pathway: JNK and ERK signaling | |
| 3. Post-translationally stabilizing TGFβR1 protein | |
| Renal fibrosis [ | 1. Canonical TGFβ pathway: SMAD3 signaling |
| 2. Post-translationally stabilizing TGFβR1 protein | |
| Liver fibrosis [ | 1. Non-canonical TGFβ pathway: JNK and STAT3 signaling |
Fig. 2Summary of the molecular mechanisms by which TXNDC5 promotes organ fibrogenesis. Schematic illustration of the mechanisms by which TXNDC5 contributes to organ fibrosis. TGFβ-stimulated ER stress activates the ATF6 branch, which transcriptionally activates TXNDC5 by physically interacting with TXNDC5 promoter. Increased TXNDC5 levels promote fibrogenic responses through 4 context-dependent mechanisms including (1) facilitating proper folding of fibrogenic ECM proteins, (2) stabilizing TGFβ receptor 1, and activating TGFβ non-canonical (3) JNK and (4) STAT3 signaling