posted on 2025-05-10, 13:49authored byDavid M. Habiel, Ana Camelo, Fernanda Pilataxi, Lori Clarke, Ethan Grant, Arthur Lewis, Bethany Moore, Darryl A. Knight, Cory M. Hogaboam, Lynne A. Murray, Milena Espindola, Timothy Burwell, Richard Hanna, Elena Miranda, Alan Carruthers, Matthew Bell, Ana Lucia Coelho, Hao Liu
Lung fibrosis is an unabated wound healing response characterized by the loss and aberrant function of lung epithelial cells. Herein, we report that extracellular Clusterin promoted epithelial cell apoptosis whereas intracellular Clusterin maintained epithelium viability during lung repair. Unlike normal and COPD lungs, IPF lungs were characterized by significantly increased extracellular Clusterin whereas the inverse was evident for intracellular Clusterin. In vitro and in vivo studies demonstrated that extracellular Clusterin promoted epithelial cell apoptosis while intercellular Clusterin modulated the expression of the DNA repair proteins, MSH2, MSH6, OGG1 and BRCA1. The fibrotic response in Clusterin deficient (CLU−/−) mice persisted after bleomycin and it was associated with increased DNA damage, reduced DNA repair responses, and elevated cellular senescence. Remarkably, this pattern mirrored that observed in IPF lung tissues. Together, our results show that cellular localization of Clusterin leads to divergent effects on epithelial cell regeneration and lung repair during fibrosis.
Funding
NHMRC
1099569
History
Journal title
Scientific Reports
Volume
7
Article number
15444
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Language
en, English
College/Research Centre
Faculty of Health and Medicine
School
School of Biomedical Sciences and Pharmacy
Rights statement
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