FoxO3 an important player in fibrogenesis and therapeutic target for idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis.

TitleFoxO3 an important player in fibrogenesis and therapeutic target for idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2018
AuthorsAl-Tamari HM, Dabral S, Schmall A, Sarvari P, Ruppert C, Paik J, DePinho RA, Grimminger F, Eickelberg O, Guenther A, Seeger W, Savai R, Pullamsetti SS
JournalEMBO Mol Med
Volume10
Issue2
Pagination276-293
Date Published2018 02
ISSN1757-4684
KeywordsAnimals, Cell Proliferation, Cell Transdifferentiation, Cells, Cultured, Cytokines, Down-Regulation, Fibroblasts, Forkhead Box Protein O3, Gene Knockout Techniques, Humans, Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis, Models, Animal, Myofibroblasts, Phosphorylation, Staurosporine
Abstract

Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is a progressive and fatal parenchymal lung disease with limited therapeutic options, with fibroblast-to-myofibroblast transdifferentiation and hyperproliferation playing a major role. Investigating -cultured (myo)fibroblasts from human IPF lungs as well as fibroblasts isolated from bleomycin-challenged mice, Forkhead box O3 (FoxO3) transcription factor was found to be less expressed, hyperphosphorylated, and nuclear-excluded relative to non-diseased controls. Downregulation and/or hyperphosphorylation of FoxO3 was reproduced by exposure of normal human lung fibroblasts to various pro-fibrotic growth factors and cytokines (FCS, PDGF, IGF1, TGF-β1). Moreover, selective knockdown of FoxO3 in the normal human lung fibroblasts reproduced the transdifferentiation and hyperproliferation phenotype. Importantly, mice with global- () or fibroblast-specific () FoxO3 knockout displayed enhanced susceptibility to bleomycin challenge, with augmented fibrosis, loss of lung function, and increased mortality. Activation of FoxO3 with UCN-01, a staurosporine derivative currently investigated in clinical cancer trials, reverted the IPF myofibroblast phenotype and blocked the bleomycin-induced lung fibrosis These studies implicate FoxO3 as a critical integrator of pro-fibrotic signaling in lung fibrosis and pharmacological reconstitution of FoxO3 as a novel treatment strategy.

DOI10.15252/emmm.201606261
Alternate JournalEMBO Mol Med
PubMed ID29217661
PubMed Central IDPMC5801513
Grant ListR01 AG048284 / AG / NIA NIH HHS / United States
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Ji-Hye Paik, Ph.D.

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