4.6 Article

Transforming Growth Factor-induced Protein Promotes NF-κB-mediated Angiogenesis during Postnatal Lung Development

Journal

Publisher

AMER THORACIC SOC
DOI: 10.1165/rcmb.2020-0153OC

Keywords

alveolarization; endothelial migration; colony-stimulating factor-3; nitric oxide production; bronchopulmonary dysplasia

Funding

  1. U.S. National Institutes of Health [HL122918, HL148165, HL110002]
  2. Stanford Maternal Child Health Institute
  3. Tashia and John Morgridge Faculty Scholar Award
  4. Stanford Chemical Engineering Undergraduate Summer Research Program
  5. Stanford C.J. Huang SAMSUNG Fellowship
  6. University of Utah School of Medicine, Division of Neonatology

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study identified TGFBI as a developmentally regulated protein that promotes NF-kappa B-mediated angiogenesis during early alveolarization by enhancing nitric oxide production. Dysregulation of TGFBI expression may contribute to diseases marked by impaired alveolar and vascular growth.
Pulmonary angiogenesis is a key driver of alveolarization. Our prior studies showed that NF-kappa B promotes pulmonary angiogenesis during early alveolarization. However, the mechanisms regulating temporal-specific NF-kappa B activation in the pulmonary vasculature are unknown. To identify mechanisms that activate proangiogenic NF-kappa B signaling in the developing pulmonary vasculature, proteomic analysis of the lung secretomewas performed using two-dimensional difference gel electrophoresis. NF-kappa B activation and angiogenic function was assessed in primary pulmonary endothelial cells (PECs) and TGFBI (transforming growth factor-beta-induced protein)-regulated genes identified using RNA sequencing. Alveolarization and pulmonary angiogenesis was assessed in wild-type and Tgfbi null mice exposed to normoxia or hyperoxia. Lung TGFBI expression was determined in premature lambs supported by invasive and noninvasive respiratory support. Secreted factors from the early alveolar, but not the late alveolar or adult lung, promoted proliferation and migration in quiescent, adult PECs. Proteomic analysis identified TGFBI as one protein highly expressed by the early alveolar lung that promoted PEC migration by activating NF-kB via avb3 integrins. RNA sequencing identified Csf3 as a TGFBI-regulated gene that enhances nitric oxide production in PECs. Loss of TGFBI in mice exaggerated the impaired pulmonary angiogenesis induced by chronic hyperoxia, and TGFBI expression was disrupted in premature lambs with impaired alveolarization. Our studies identify TGFBI as a developmentally regulated protein that promotes NF-kappa B-mediated angiogenesis during early alveolarization by enhancing nitric oxide production. We speculate that dysregulation of TGFBI expression may contribute to diseases marked by impaired alveolar and vascular growth.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available