Publication | Open Access
An Essential Role for Fibronectin Extra Type III Domain A in Pulmonary Fibrosis
297
Citations
37
References
2007
Year
Let's parse. Lines: 1. [Background] Rationale: Tissue fibrosis is considered a dysregulated wound-healing response. 2.
Rationale: Tissue fibrosis is considered a dysregulated wound-healing response. Fibronectin containing extra type III domain A (EDA) is implicated in the regulation of wound healing. EDA-containing fibronectin is deposited during wound repair, and its presence precedes that of collagen.Objectives: To investigate the role of EDA-containing fibronectin in lung fibrogenesis.Methods: Primary lung fibroblasts from patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis or from patients undergoing resection for lung cancer were assessed for EDA-containing fibronectin and α-smooth muscle actin (α-SMA) expression. Mice lacking the EDA domain of fibronectin and their wild-type littermates were challenged with the bleomycin model of lung fibrosis. Primary lung fibroblasts from these mice were assayed in vitro to determine the contribution of EDA-containing fibronectin to fibroblast phenotypes.Measurements and Main Results: Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis lung fibroblasts produced markedly more EDA-containing fibronectin and α-SMA than control fibroblasts. EDA-null mice failed to develop significant fibrosis 21 days after bleomycin challenge, whereas wild-type controls developed the expected increase in total lung collagen. Histologic analysis of EDA-null lungs after bleomycin showed less collagen and fewer α-SMA–expressing myofibroblasts compared with that observed in wild-type mice. Failure to develop lung fibrosis in EDA-null mice correlated with diminished activation of latent transforming growth factor (TGF)-β and decreased lung fibroblast responsiveness to active TGF-β in vitro.Conclusions: The data show that EDA-containing fibronectin is essential for the fibrotic resolution of lung injury through TGF-β activation and responsiveness, and suggest that EDA-containing fibronectin plays a critical role in tissue fibrogenesis.
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