Author
Listed:
- Tzu-Han Lee
(National Taiwan University College of Medicine)
- Chih-Fan Yeh
(National Taiwan University College of Medicine
National Taiwan University Hospital)
- Ying-Tung Lee
(National Taiwan University College of Medicine)
- Ying-Chun Shih
(National Taiwan University College of Medicine)
- Yen-Ting Chen
(National Taiwan University College of Medicine)
- Chen-Ting Hung
(National Taiwan University College of Medicine)
- Ming-Yi You
(National Taiwan University College of Medicine)
- Pei-Chen Wu
(National Taiwan University College of Medicine)
- Tzu-Pin Shentu
(University of Chicago)
- Ru-Ting Huang
(University of Chicago)
- Yu-Shan Lin
(National Taiwan University College of Medicine)
- Yueh-Feng Wu
(National Taiwan University)
- Sung-Jan Lin
(National Taiwan University
National Taiwan University Hospital and College of Medicine
National Taiwan University)
- Frank-Leigh Lu
(National Taiwan University Hospital)
- Po-Nien Tsao
(National Taiwan University
National Taiwan University Hospital)
- Tzu-Hung Lin
(Industrial Technology Research Institute)
- Shen-Chuan Lo
(Industrial Technology Research Institute)
- Yi-Shuan Tseng
(National Taiwan University College of Medicine)
- Wan-Lin Wu
(National Taiwan University College of Medicine)
- Chiung-Nien Chen
(National Taiwan University Hospital)
- Chau-Chung Wu
(National Taiwan University Hospital
National Taiwan University College of Medicine)
- Shuei-Liong Lin
(National Taiwan University
National Taiwan University College of Medicine
National Taiwan University Hospital)
- Anne I. Sperling
(University of Chicago)
- Robert D. Guzy
(University of Chicago)
- Yun Fang
(University of Chicago)
- Kai-Chien Yang
(National Taiwan University College of Medicine
National Taiwan University Hospital
National Taiwan University
Academia Sinica)
Abstract
Pulmonary fibrosis (PF) is a major public health problem with limited therapeutic options. There is a clear need to identify novel mediators of PF to develop effective therapeutics. Here we show that an ER protein disulfide isomerase, thioredoxin domain containing 5 (TXNDC5), is highly upregulated in the lung tissues from both patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis and a mouse model of bleomycin (BLM)-induced PF. Global deletion of Txndc5 markedly reduces the extent of PF and preserves lung function in mice following BLM treatment. Mechanistic investigations demonstrate that TXNDC5 promotes fibrogenesis by enhancing TGFβ1 signaling through direct binding with and stabilization of TGFBR1 in lung fibroblasts. Moreover, TGFβ1 stimulation is shown to upregulate TXNDC5 via ER stress/ATF6-dependent transcriptional control in lung fibroblasts. Inducing fibroblast-specific deletion of Txndc5 mitigates the progression of BLM-induced PF and lung function deterioration. Targeting TXNDC5, therefore, could be a novel therapeutic approach against PF.
Suggested Citation
Tzu-Han Lee & Chih-Fan Yeh & Ying-Tung Lee & Ying-Chun Shih & Yen-Ting Chen & Chen-Ting Hung & Ming-Yi You & Pei-Chen Wu & Tzu-Pin Shentu & Ru-Ting Huang & Yu-Shan Lin & Yueh-Feng Wu & Sung-Jan Lin & , 2020.
"Fibroblast-enriched endoplasmic reticulum protein TXNDC5 promotes pulmonary fibrosis by augmenting TGFβ signaling through TGFBR1 stabilization,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 11(1), pages 1-20, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:11:y:2020:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-020-18047-x
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-18047-x
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