Genes, other than Muc5b, play a role in bleomycin-induced lung fibrosis
Abstract
Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is an incurable genetic disease that affects 5 million people worldwide. The gain-of-function MUC5B promoter variant rs35705950 is the dominant genetic risk factor for IPF, yet has a low penetrance. This raises the possibility that other genes and transcripts affect the penetrance of MUC5B. Previously, we have shown that the concentration of Muc5b in bronchoalveolar epithelia is directly associated with the extent and persistence of bleomycin-induced lung fibrosis in mice. In this study, we investigated whether bleomycin-induced lung injury is Muc5b dependent in genetically divergent strains of mice. Specifically, mice from the eight Diversity Outbred (DO) founders were phenotyped for Muc5b expression and lung fibrosis 3 wk after intratracheal bleomycin administration. Although we identified strains with low Muc5b expression and minimal lung fibrosis (CAST/EiJ and PWK/PhJ) and strains with high Muc5b expression and extensive lung fibrosis (NZO/H1LtJ and WSB/EiJ), there also were strains that did not demonstrate a clear relationship between Muc5b expression and lung fibrosis (129S1/SvlmJ, NOD/ShiLtJ, and C57BL/6J, A/J). Hierarchical clustering suggests that other factors may work in concert with or potentially independent of Muc5b to promote bleomycin-induced lung injury and fibrosis. This study suggests that these strains and their recombinant inbred crosses may prove helpful in identifying the genes and transcripts that interact with Muc5b and cause lung fibrosis.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Pub Defense Publication
- Publication Date
- Aug 01, 2021
- Source ID
- 10.1152/ajplung.00615.2020
Entities
People
- Alani M. Estrella
- Corinne E. Hennessy
- David A Schwartz
- Evgenia Dobrinskikh
- Ivana V. Yang
- Jonathan S Kurche
- Marvin I. Schwarz
- Naoko Hara
Organizations
- National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
- United States Department of Defense
- University of Colorado
- University of Colorado Boulder
- University of Colorado Cancer Center