Publication | Open Access
Secreted Phosphoprotein 1 Is a Determinant of Lung Function Development in Mice
27
Citations
92
References
2014
Year
Inflammatory Lung DiseaseLung InflammationGeneticsPulmonary Alveolar ProteinosisGene CharacterizationEnlarged AirspaceInflammationTranscriptional RegulationPulmonary PharmacologyLung Function DevelopmentCell SignalingLung Spp1 TranscriptPulmonary FibrosisPhosphoprotein 1Gene ExpressionFunctional GenomicsCell BiologyLung CancerPulmonary DiseasePulmonary Vascular DiseaseGene FunctionPhysiologyPulmonary PhysiologyBronchial NeoplasmLung MechanicsMicroarray AnalysisMedicine
Secreted phosphoprotein 1 (Spp1) is located within quantitative trait loci associated with lung function that was previously identified by contrasting C3H/HeJ and JF1/Msf mouse strains that have extremely divergent lung function. JF1/Msf mice with diminished lung function had reduced lung SPP1 transcript and protein during the peak stage of alveologenesis (postnatal day [P]14-P28) as compared with C3H/HeJ mice. In addition to a previously identified genetic variant that altered runt-related transcription factor 2 (RUNX2) binding in the Spp1 promoter, we identified another promoter variant in a putative RUNX2 binding site that increased the DNA protein binding. SPP1 induced dose-dependent mouse lung epithelial-15 cell proliferation. Spp1((-/-)) mice have decreased specific total lung capacity/body weight, higher specific compliance, and increased mean airspace chord length (Lm) compared with Spp1((+/+)) mice. Microarray analysis revealed enriched gene ontogeny categories, with numerous genes associated with lung development and/or respiratory disease. Insulin-like growth factor 1, Hedgehog-interacting protein, wingless-related mouse mammary tumor virus integration site 5A, and NOTCH1 transcripts decreased in the lung of P14 Spp1((-/-)) mice as determined by quantitative RT-PCR analysis. SPP1 promotes pneumocyte growth, and mice lacking SPP1 have smaller, more compliant lungs with enlarged airspace (i.e., increased Lm). Microarray analysis suggests a dysregulation of key lung developmental transcripts in gene-targeted Spp1((-/-)) mice, particularly during the peak phase of alveologenesis. In addition to its known roles in lung disease, this study supports SPP1 as a determinant of lung development in mice.
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