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Autocrine lysophosphatidic acid signaling activates [beta]-catenin and promotes lung allograft fibrosis

Authors :
Cao, Pengxiu
Aoki, Yoshiro
Badri, Linda
Walker, Natalie M.
Manning, Casey M.
Lagstein, Amir
Fearon, Eric R.
Lama, Vibha N.
Source :
Journal of Clinical Investigation. April, 2017, Vol. 127 Issue 4, p1517, 14 p.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Tissue fibrosis is the primary cause of long-term graft failure after organ transplantation. In lung allografts, progressive terminal airway fibrosis leads to an irreversible decline in lung function termed bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome (BOS). Here, we have identified an autocrine pathway linking nuclear factor of activated T cells 2 (NFAT1), autotaxin (ATX), lysophosphatidic acid (LPA), and [beta]-catenin that contributes to progression of fibrosis in lung allografts. Mesenchymal cells (MCs) derived from fibrotic lung allografts (BOS MCs) demonstrated constitutive nuclear [beta]-catenin expression that was dependent on autocrine ATX secretion and LPA signaling. We found that NFAT1 upstream of ATX regulated expression of ATX as well as [beta]-catenin. Silencing NFAT1 in BOS MCs suppressed ATX expression, and sustained overexpression of NFAT1 increased ATX expression and activity in non-fibrotic MCs. LPA signaling induced NFAT1 nuclear translocation, suggesting that autocrine LPA synthesis promotes NFAT1 transcriptional activation and ATX secretion in a positive feedback loop. In an in vivo mouse orthotopic lung transplant model of BOS, antagonism of the LPA receptor (LPA1) or ATX inhibition decreased allograft fibrosis and was associated with lower active [beta]-catenin and dephosphorylated NFAT1 expression. Lung allografts from [beta]-catenin reporter mice demonstrated reduced [beta]-catenin transcriptional activation in the presence of LPA1 antagonist, confirming an in vivo role for LPA signaling in [beta]-catenin activation.<br />Introduction Fibrogenesis in the transplanted organ is the predominant cause of allograft failure and death across all solid organs. By 5 years after transplantation, 50% of lung transplant recipients develop [...]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00219738
Volume :
127
Issue :
4
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Investigation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.491093290
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI88896