4.6 Article

Human senescent fibroblasts trigger progressive lung fibrosis in mice

Journal

AGING-US
Volume 15, Issue 14, Pages 6641-6657

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC

Keywords

mouse model; cellular senescence; pulmonary fibrosis; antifibrotics; senolytic

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Cell senescence has emerged as a potential mechanism in fibrosing interstitial lung diseases, and senescent human fibroblasts can trigger progressive fibrogenic reaction in the lungs. The secretome of senescent fibroblasts is pro-senescence and pro-fibrotic, while non-senescent fibroblasts lack these activities. Drugs like navitoclax, nintedanib, and pirfenidone can ameliorate lung fibrosis induced by senescent fibroblasts in mice.
Cell senescence has recently emerged as a potentially relevant pathogenic mechanism in fibrosing interstitial lung diseases (f-ILDs), particularly in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. We hypothesized that senescent human fibroblasts may suffice to trigger a progressive fibrogenic reaction in the lung. To address this, senescent human lung fibroblasts, or their secretome (SASP), were instilled into the lungs of immunodeficient mice. We found that: (1) human senescent fibroblasts engraft in the lungs of immunodeficient mice and trigger progressive lung fibrosis associated to increasing levels of mouse senescent cells, whereas non-senescent fibroblasts do not trigger fibrosis; (2) the SASP of human senescent fibroblasts is pro-senescence and pro fibrotic both in vitro when added to mouse recipient cells and in vivo when delivered into the lungs of mice, whereas the conditioned medium (CM) from non-senescent fibroblasts lacks these activities; and, (3) navitoclax, nintedanib and pirfenidone ameliorate lung fibrosis induced by senescent human fibroblasts in mice, albeit only navitoclax displayed senolytic activity. We conclude that human senescent fibroblasts, through their bioactive secretome, trigger a progressive fibrogenic reaction in the lungs of immunodeficient mice that includes the induction of paracrine senescence in the cells of the host, supporting the concept that senescent cells actively contribute to disease progression in patients with f-ILDs.

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