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Graduate Student Seminar Series – Usha Kabilan

February 6 @ 4:10 pm - 4:25 pm EST

Graduate Student Seminar Series
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Location: 2nd Floor Auditorium (TRI/KITE) – 550 University Ave
Presentation Title: Macrophage-Fibroblast crosstalk in lung fibrosis
Abstract:
Background: Lung fibrosis is a devastating disease that can affect all organs post-injury due to inadequate repair by activated fibroblasts. These so-called myofibroblasts (MFs) accumulate collagen during fibrosis, resulting in progressive lung stiffening and respiratory failure. Another hallmark of fibrosis is extracellular activation of transforming growth factor-β1 from latent complexes (L-TGF-β1) by fibroblast αv integrins. TGF-β1 drives fibroblast-to-MF activation and renders them resistant to apoptotic clearance. We published that contact with macrophages (Mϕ) mediates chronic TGF-β1 signalling in lung fibroblasts. How L-TGF-β1 is presented by Mϕ in the lung remains unclear.
Hypothesis: Presentation of L-TGF-β1 on the surface of Mϕ for activation by fibroblasts in direct contact results in chronic MF activation and survival.
Objective: To elucidate how L-TGF-β1-presenting Mϕ and TGF-β1-activating MFs create a pro-fibrotic niche of active TGF-β1.
Methods: Monocytes from mouse bone marrow and human peripheral blood were polarized using cytokine cocktails that mimic normal, inflammatory, and fibrotic lung conditions. Mϕ polarization and expression of L-TGF-β1 presenting membrane proteins (“tethers”) such as GARP and NRROS were assessed using flow cytometry and qRT-PCR. Mϕ expressing L-TGF-β1 tethers were co-cultured with fibroblasts, and TGF-β1 activation was quantified using αSMA (alpha-smooth muscle actin) expression, an MF marker, using Immunofluorescence microscopy. Gene silencing of L-TGF-β1 tethers and inhibition of αv integrins were used to modulate TGF-β1 activation in co-cultures.
Results: Polarization with GM-CSF and IL-13, cytokines that are characteristic of the lung alveolar microenvironment, produced CD163+CD200R+ alveolar-like Mϕ (ALMs). ALMs expressed high levels of TGF-β1, and the L-TGF-β1 tethers GARP, while no difference in NRROS gene expression. GARP loss and integrin inhibition from ALMs in co-cultures with fibroblasts disrupted TGF-β1 and MF activation that drives lung fibrosis.
Conclusion and Significance: Presentation of L-TGF-β1 by GARP on the surface of ALMs to αv integrin-expressing fibroblasts is crucial for MF activation. Specifically inhibiting GARP-TGF-β1 may represent a novel targeted approach to block MF activation in lung fibrosis.
Supervisor Name: Boris Hinz
Year of Study: 2
Program of Study: PhD
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  • 2nd Floor Auditorium (TRI/KITE)