Abstract

Background

The alveolar epithelial type II cell (AT2) and its senescence play a pivotal role in alveolar damage and pulmonary fibrosis. Cell circadian rhythm is strongly associated with cell senescence. Differentiated embryonic chondrocyte expressed gene 1 (DEC1) is a very important circadian clock gene. However, the role of DEC1 in AT2 senescence and pulmonary fibrosis was still unclear.

Results

In this study, a circadian disruption model of light intervention was used. It was found that circadian disruption exacerbated pulmonary fibrosis in mice. To understand the underlying mechanism, DEC1 levels were investigated. Results showed that DEC1 levels increased in lung tissues of IPF patients and in bleomycin-induced mouse fibrotic lungs. In vitro study revealed that bleomycin and TGF-β1 increased the expressions of DEC1, collagen-I, and fibronectin in AT2 cells. Inhibition of DEC1 mitigated bleomycin-induced fibrotic changes in vitro and in vivo. After that, cell senescence was observed in bleomycin-treated AT2 cells and mouse models, but these were prevented by DEC1 inhibition. At last, p21 was confirmed having circadian rhythm followed DEC1 in normal conditions. But bleomycin disrupted the circadian rhythm and increased DEC1 which promoted p21 expression, increased p21 mediated AT2 senescence and pulmonary fibrosis.

Conclusions

Taken together, circadian clock protein DEC1 mediated pulmonary fibrosis via p21 and cell senescence in alveolar epithelial type II cells.

Details

Title
DEC1 is involved in circadian rhythm disruption-exacerbated pulmonary fibrosis
Author
Shuai-Jun, Chen; Fan, Yu; Xiao, Feng; Li, Qian; Ye-Han, Jiang; Li-Qin, Zhao; Pei-Pei, Cheng; Wang, Meng; Lin-Jie, Song; Li-Mei, Liang; Xin-Liang, He; Xiong, Liang; Xiang, Fei; Wang, Xiaorong; Ye, Hong; Wan-Li, Ma
Pages
1-17
Section
Research
Publication year
2024
Publication date
2024
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
e-ISSN
1478811X
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
3054211077
Copyright
© 2024. This work is licensed under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.