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  • Inhibition of MRTF activation as a clinically achievable anti-fibrotic mechanism for Pirfenidone.

Inhibition of MRTF activation as a clinically achievable anti-fibrotic mechanism for Pirfenidone.

The European respiratory journal (2022-12-31)
Hsiao-Yen Ma, Jason A Vander Heiden, Salil Uttarwar, Ying Xi, Elsa-Noah N'Diaye, Ryan LaCanna, Patrick Caplazi, Sarah Gierke, John Moffat, Paul J Wolters, Ning Ding
ABSTRACT

Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is a progressive fibrotic disease characterized by aberrant fibroblast/myofibroblast accumulation and excessive collagen matrix deposition in the alveolar areas of lungs. As the first approved IPF medication, pirfenidone (PFD) significantly decelerates lung function decline while its underlying anti-fibrotic mechanism remains elusive. In this study, using transcriptomic and immunofluorescence analyses of primary human IPF tissues, we showed that myocardin related transcription factor (MRTF) signaling is activated in myofibroblasts accumulated in IPF lungs. Furthermore, we showed that PFD inhibits MRTF activation in primary human lung fibroblasts at the clinically achievable concentrations (half-maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50)=50-150 µM, maximal inhibition>90%, maximal concentration of PFD in patients<100 µM). Mechanistically, PFD appears to exert its inhibitory effects by promoting the interaction between MRTF and actin indirectly. Finally, PFD-treated IPF lungs exhibit significantly less MRTF activation in FF areas than naïve IPF lungs. Our results suggest MRTF signaling as a direct target for PFD and implicate that some of the anti-fibrotic effects of PFD may be due to MRTF inhibition in lung fibroblasts.

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Anti-MKL1 antibody produced in rabbit, Prestige Antibodies® Powered by Atlas Antibodies, affinity isolated antibody, buffered aqueous glycerol solution