4.8 Article

Fibroblast-enriched endoplasmic reticulum protein TXNDC5 promotes pulmonary fibrosis by augmenting TGFβ signaling through TGFBR1 stabilization

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-18047-x

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Taiwan Ministry of Science Technology [103-2320-B-002-068-MY2, 105-2628-B-002 -042-MY4, 108-2314-B-002-199-MY3, 108-2314-B-002-155-MY3, 106-2314-B-002-163-MY3]
  2. Taiwan National Health Research Institute Career Development [NHRI-EX104-10418SC]
  3. National Health Research Institute Innovative Research Grant [NHRI-EX109-10936SI]
  4. CRC Translational Research Grant from the Institute of Biomedical Sciences at Academia Sinica, Taiwan [IBMS-CRC108-P03]
  5. National Taiwan University Hospital [NTUH. 109-T15 (PNT), 106-P02, 105-CGN01, UN106-026, 106-N3740, VN106-12, 107-T02, UN107-019, 107-N4062, VN107-03, 108-T16, VN108-06, VN109-07, NTUH.108-P04, 108-N4198, 108-S4247, 108-EDN03, 109-S4576]
  6. Career Development Grant from National Taiwan University [109L7872]

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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 TGF beta 1 signaling through direct binding with and stabilization of TGFBR1 in lung fibroblasts. Moreover, TGF beta 1 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.

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