Loss of cell junctional components and matrix alterations drive cell desquamation and fibrotic changes in Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis

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Loss of cell junctional components and matrix alterations drive cell desquamation and fibrotic changes in Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis

Authors

Chandran, R. R.; Vijayaraj, P.; Garcia-Milian, R.; King, J.; Castillo, K.; Chen, L.; Kwon, Y.; Williams, S.; Rickabaugh, T.; Langerman, J.; Choi, W.; Sen, C.; Lever, J. E. P.; Li, Q.; Pavelkov, N.; Plosa, E.; Rowe, S. M.; Plath, K.; Clair, G.; Gomperts, B.

Abstract

The distal bronchioles in Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis (IPF) exhibit histopathological abnormalities such as bronchiolization, peribronchiolar fibrosis and honeycomb cysts that contribute to the overall architectural remodeling of lung tissue seen in the disease. Here we describe an additional histopathologic finding of epithelial desquamation in patients with IPF, wherein epithelial cells detach from the basement membrane of the distal bronchioles. To understand the mechanism driving this pathology, we performed spatial transcriptomics of the epithelial cells and spatial proteomics of the basement membrane of the distal bronchioles from IPF patients and patients with no prior history of lung disease. Our findings reveal a downregulation of cell junctional components, upregulation of epithelial-mesenchymal transition signatures and dysregulated basement membrane matrix in IPF distal bronchioles, facilitating epithelial desquamation. Further, functional assays identified regulation between Collagen IV in the matrix, and the junctional genes JUP and PLEC, that is crucial for maintaining distal bronchiolar homeostasis. In IPF, this balanced regulation between matrix and cell-junctions is disrupted, leading to loss of epithelial adhesion, peribronchiolar fibrosis and epithelial desquamation. Overall, our study suggests that in IPF the interplay between the loss of cell junctions and a dysregulated matrix results in desquamation of distal bronchiolar epithelium and lung remodeling, exacerbating the disease.

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