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Lung epithelial-specific TRIP-1 overexpression maintains epithelial integrity during hyperoxia exposure.

Michael F NypSherry M MabryAngels NavarroHeather MendenRicardo E PerezVenkatesh SampathIkechukwu I Ekekezie
Published in: Physiological reports (2019)
The onset and degree of injury occurring in animals that develop hyperoxic acute lung injury (HALI) is dependent on age at exposure, suggesting that developmentally regulated pathways/factors must underlie initiation of the epithelial injury and subsequent repair. Type II TGFβ receptor interacting protein-1 (TRIP-1) is a negative regulator of TGFβ signaling, which we have previously shown is a developmentally regulated protein with modulatory effects on epithelial-fibroblastic signaling. The aim of this study was to assess if type II alveolar epithelial cells overexpressing TRIP-1 are protected against hyperoxia-induced epithelial injury, and in turn HALI. Rat lung epithelial cells (RLE) overexpressing TRIP-1 or LacZ were exposed to 85% oxygen for 4 days. A surfactant protein C (SPC)-driven TRIP-1 overexpression mouse (TRIP-1AECTg+ ) was generated and exposed to hyperoxia (>95% for 4 days) at 4 weeks of age to assess the effects TRIP-1 overexpression has on HALI. RLE overexpressing TRIP-1 resisted hyperoxia-induced apoptosis. Mice overexpressing TRIP-1 in their lung type II alveolar epithelial cells (TRIP-1AECTg+ ) showed normal lung development, increased phospho-AKT level and E-cadherin, along with resistance to HALI, as evidence by less TGFβ activation, apoptosis, alveolar macrophage influx, KC expression. Taken together, these findings point to existence of a TRIP-1 mediated molecular pathway affording protection against epithelial/acute lung injury.
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