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Item Interplay between CCN1 and Wnt5a in endothelial cells and pericytes determines the angiogenic outcome in a model of ischemic retinopathy(SpringerNature, 2017-05-03) Lee, Sangmi; Elaskandrany, Menna; Lau, Lester F.; Lazzaro, Douglas; Grant, Maria B.; Chaqour, Brahim; Department of Ophthalmology, School of MedicineCYR61-CTGF-NOV (CCN)1 is a dynamically expressed extracellular matrix (ECM) protein with critical functions in cardiovascular development and tissue repair. Angiogenic endothelial cells (ECs) are a major cellular source of CCN1 which, once secreted, associates with the ECM and the cell surface and tightly controls the bidirectional flow of information between cells and the surrounding matrix. Endothelium-specific CCN1 deletion in mice using a cre/lox strategy induces EC hyperplasia and causes blood vessels to coalesce into large flat hyperplastic sinuses with no distinctive hierarchical organization. This is consistent with the role of CCN1 as a negative feedback regulator of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) receptor activation. In the mouse model of oxygen-induced retinopathy (OIR), pericytes become the predominant CCN1 producing cells. Pericyte-specific deletion of CCN1 significantly decreases pathological retinal neovascularization following OIR. CCN1 induces the expression of the non-canonical Wnt5a in pericyte but not in EC cultures. In turn, exogenous Wnt5a inhibits CCN1 gene expression, induces EC proliferation and increases hypersprouting. Concordantly, treatment of mice with TNP470, a non-canonical Wnt5a inhibitor, reestablishes endothelial expression of CCN1 and significantly decreases pathological neovascular growth in OIR. Our data highlight the significance of CCN1-EC and CCN1-pericyte communication signals in driving physiological and pathological angiogenesis.Item PU.1 controls fibroblast polarization and tissue fibrosis(Springer Nature, 2019-02) Wohlfahrt, Thomas; Rauber, Simon; Uebe, Steffen; Luber, Markus; Soare, Alina; Ekici, Arif; Weber, Stefanie; Matei, Alexandru-Emil; Chen, Chih-Wei; Maier, Christiane; Karouzakis, Emmanuel; Kiener, Hans P.; Pachera, Elena; Dees, Clara; Beyer, Christian; Daniel, Christoph; Gelse, Kolja; Kremer, Andreas E.; Naschberger, Elisabeth; Stürzl, Michael; Butter, Falk; Sticherling, Michael; Finotto, Susetta; Kreuter, Alexander; Kaplan, Mark H.; Jüngel, Astrid; Gay, Steffen; Nutt, Stephen L.; Boykin, David W.; Poon, Gregory M. K.; Distler, Oliver; Schett, Georg; Distler, Jörg H. W.; Ramming, Andreas; Pediatrics, IU School of MedicineFibroblasts are polymorphic cells with pleiotropic roles in organ morphogenesis, tissue homeostasis and immune responses. In fibrotic diseases, fibroblasts synthesize abundant amounts of extracellular matrix, which induces scarring and organ failure. By contrast, a hallmark feature of fibroblasts in arthritis is degradation of the extracellular matrix because of the release of metalloproteinases and degrading enzymes, and subsequent tissue destruction. The mechanisms that drive these functionally opposing pro-fibrotic and pro-inflammatory phenotypes of fibroblasts remain unknown. Here we identify the transcription factor PU.1 as an essential regulator of the pro-fibrotic gene expression program. The interplay between transcriptional and post-transcriptional mechanisms that normally control the expression of PU.1 expression is perturbed in various fibrotic diseases, resulting in the upregulation of PU.1, induction of fibrosis-associated gene sets and a phenotypic switch in extracellular matrix-producing pro-fibrotic fibroblasts. By contrast, pharmacological and genetic inactivation of PU.1 disrupts the fibrotic network and enables reprogramming of fibrotic fibroblasts into resting fibroblasts, leading to regression of fibrosis in several organs.Item Uncoupling of macrophage inflammation from self-renewal modulates host recovery from respiratory viral infection(Cell Press, 2021) Zhu, Bibo; Wu, Yue; Huang, Su; Zhang, Ruixuan; Son, Young Min; Li, Chaofan; Cheon, In Su; Gao, Xiaochen; Wang, Min; Chen, Yao; Zhou, Xian; Nguyen, Quynh; Phan, Anthony T.; Behl, Supriya; Taketo, M. Mark; Mack, Matthias; Shapiro, Virginia S.; Zeng, Hu; Ebihara, Hideki; Mullon, John J.; Edell, Eric S.; Reisenauer, Janani S.; Demirel, Nadir; Kern, Ryan M.; Chakraborty, Rana; Cui, Weiguo; Kaplan, Mark H.; Zhou, Xiaobo; Goldrath, Ananda W.; Sun, Jie; Microbiology and Immunology, School of MedicineTissue macrophages self-renew during homeostasis and produce inflammatory mediators upon microbial infection. We examined the relationship between proliferative and inflammatory properties of tissue macrophages by defining the impact of the Wnt/β-catenin pathway, a central regulator of self-renewal, in alveolar macrophages (AMs). Activation of β-catenin by Wnt ligand inhibited AM proliferation and stemness, but promoted inflammatory activity. In a murine influenza viral pneumonia model, β-catenin-mediated AM inflammatory activity promoted acute host morbidity; in contrast, AM proliferation enabled repopulation of reparative AMs and tissue recovery following viral clearance. Mechanistically, Wnt treatment promoted β-catenin-HIF-1α interaction and glycolysis-dependent inflammation while suppressing mitochondrial metabolism and thereby, AM proliferation. Differential HIF-1α activities distinguished proliferative and inflammatory AMs in vivo. This β-catenin-HIF-1α axis was conserved in human AMs and enhanced HIF-1α expression associated with macrophage inflammation in COVID-19 patients. Thus, inflammatory and reparative activities of lung macrophages are regulated by β-catenin-HIF-1α signaling, with implications for the treatment of severe respiratory diseases.