WNT5A Is a Regulator of Fibroblast Proliferation and Resistance to Apoptosis
Louis J. Vuga1,
Ahmi Ben-Yehudah2,
Elizabetha Kovkarova-Naumovski1,
Timothy Oriss1,
Kevin F. Gibson1,
Carol Feghali-Bostwick1 and
Naftali Kaminski1
1 Dorothy P. and Richard P. Simmons Center for Interstitial Lung Diseases, Division of Pulmonary, Allergy, and Critical Care Medicine, and 2 Pittsburgh Development Center, Magee-Women's Research Institute and Foundation, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Correspondence and requests for reprints should be addressed to Naftali Kaminski, M.D., University of Pittsburgh, School of Medicine, 3459 Fifth Ave., 628NW Montifore, Pittsburgh, PA 15213. E-mail: kaminskin{at}upmc.edu
Usual interstitial pneumonia (UIP) is a specific histopathologicpattern of interstitial lung fibrosis that may be idiopathicor secondary to autoimmune diseases and environmental exposures.In this study, we compared gene expression patterns in primaryfibroblasts isolated from lung tissues with UIP histology andfibroblasts isolated from lung tissues with normal histologyusing expression microarrays. We found that WNT5A was significantlyincreased in fibroblasts obtained from UIP lung tissues comparedwith normal lung fibroblasts, an observation verified by quantitativereal-time RT-PCR and Western blot. Because the role of WNT5Ain UIP is unknown, we treated normal lung fibroblasts or UIPlung fibroblasts with WNT5A, and found that WNT5A increasedproliferation as well as relative resistance to H2O2-inducedapoptosis. This effect was not mediated through the canonicalWNT/β-catenin pathway, as WNT5A induced a decrease in β-cateninlevels in the same cells. In addition, WNT5A induced increasesin fibronectin and 5-integrin in normal lung fibroblasts. Collectively,our data suggest that WNT5A may play a role in fibroblast expansionand survival characteristics of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosisand other fibrotic interstitial lung diseases that exhibit UIPhistological patterns.
Our results suggest a mechanism by which enhanced WNT5A secretionmay promote fibroblast proliferation and survival in usual interstitialpneumonia (UIP) lungs, despite the presence of multiple proapoptoticsignals, and thus suggest a novel explanation for the "apoptosisparadox." They also highlight a potential role for the noncanonicalWNT pathway in determining the lung phenotype in UIP.
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