JCI Insight (May 2022)

Sine oculis homeobox homolog 1 plays a critical role in pulmonary fibrosis

  • Cory Wilson,
  • Tinne C.J. Mertens,
  • Pooja Shivshankar,
  • Weizen Bi,
  • Scott D. Collum,
  • Nancy Wareing,
  • Junsuk Ko,
  • Tingting Weng,
  • Ram P. Naikawadi,
  • Paul J. Wolters,
  • Pascal Maire,
  • Soma S.K. Jyothula,
  • Rajarajan A. Thandavarayan,
  • Dewei Ren,
  • Nathan D. Elrod,
  • Eric J. Wagner,
  • Howard J. Huang,
  • Burton F. Dickey,
  • Heide L. Ford,
  • Harry Karmouty-Quintana

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 10

Abstract

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Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is a fatal disease with limited treatment options. The role of the developmental transcription factor Sine oculis homeobox homolog 1 (SIX1) in the pathophysiology of lung fibrosis is not known. IPF lung tissue samples and IPF-derived alveolar type II cells (AT2) showed a significant increase in SIX1 mRNA and protein levels, and the SIX1 transcriptional coactivators EYA1 and EYA2 were elevated. Six1 was also upregulated in bleomycin-treated (BLM-treated) mice and in a model of spontaneous lung fibrosis driven by deletion of Telomeric Repeat Binding Factor 1 (Trf1) in AT2 cells. Conditional deletion of Six1 in AT2 cells prevented or halted BLM-induced lung fibrosis, as measured by a significant reduction in histological burden of fibrosis, reduced fibrotic mediator expression, and improved lung function. These effects were associated with increased macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF) in lung epithelial cells in vivo following SIX1 overexpression in BLM-induced fibrosis. A MIF promoter–driven luciferase assay demonstrated direct binding of Six1 to the 5′-TCAGG-3′ consensus sequence of the MIF promoter, identifying a likely mechanism of SIX1-driven MIF expression in the pathogenesis of lung fibrosis and providing a potentially novel pathway for targeting in IPF therapy.

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