TY - JOUR
T1 - Corneal antifibrotic switch identified in genetic and pharmacological deficiency of vimentin
AU - Bargagna-Mohan, Paola
AU - Paranthan, Riya R.
AU - Hamza, Adel
AU - Zhan, Chang Guo
AU - Lee, Do Min
AU - Kim, Kyung Bo
AU - Lau, Daniel L.
AU - Srinivasan, Cidambi
AU - Nakayama, Keiko
AU - Nakayama, Keiichi I.
AU - Herrmann, Harald
AU - Mohan, Royce
PY - 2012/1/6
Y1 - 2012/1/6
N2 - The type III intermediate filaments (IFs) are essential cytoskeletal elements of mechanosignal transduction and serve critical roles in tissue repair. Mice genetically deficient for the IF protein vimentin (Vim -/-) have impaired wound healing from deficits in myofibroblast development. We report a surprising finding made in Vim-/- mice that corneas are protected from fibrosis and instead promote regenerative healing after traumatic alkali injury. This reparative phenotype in Vim-/- corneas is strikingly recapitulated by the pharmacological agent withaferin A (WFA), a small molecule that binds to vimentin and down-regulates its injury-induced expression. Attenuation of corneal fibrosis by WFA is mediated by down-regulation of ubiquitin-conjugating E3 ligase Skp2 and up-regulation of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors p27Kip1 and p21Cip1. In cell culture models, WFA exerts G2/M cell cycle arrest in a p27 Kip1- and Skp2-dependent manner. Finally, by developing a highly sensitive imaging method to measure corneal opacity, we identify a novel role for desmin overexpression in corneal haze. We demonstrate that desmin down-regulation by WFA via targeting the conserved WFA-ligand binding site shared among type III IFs promotes further improvement of corneal transparency without affecting cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor levels in Vim-/- mice. This dissociates a direct role for desmin in corneal cell proliferation. Taken together, our findings illuminate a previously unappreciated pathogenic role for type III IF overexpression in corneal fibrotic conditions and also validate WFA as a powerful drug lead toward anti-fibrosis therapeutic development.
AB - The type III intermediate filaments (IFs) are essential cytoskeletal elements of mechanosignal transduction and serve critical roles in tissue repair. Mice genetically deficient for the IF protein vimentin (Vim -/-) have impaired wound healing from deficits in myofibroblast development. We report a surprising finding made in Vim-/- mice that corneas are protected from fibrosis and instead promote regenerative healing after traumatic alkali injury. This reparative phenotype in Vim-/- corneas is strikingly recapitulated by the pharmacological agent withaferin A (WFA), a small molecule that binds to vimentin and down-regulates its injury-induced expression. Attenuation of corneal fibrosis by WFA is mediated by down-regulation of ubiquitin-conjugating E3 ligase Skp2 and up-regulation of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors p27Kip1 and p21Cip1. In cell culture models, WFA exerts G2/M cell cycle arrest in a p27 Kip1- and Skp2-dependent manner. Finally, by developing a highly sensitive imaging method to measure corneal opacity, we identify a novel role for desmin overexpression in corneal haze. We demonstrate that desmin down-regulation by WFA via targeting the conserved WFA-ligand binding site shared among type III IFs promotes further improvement of corneal transparency without affecting cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor levels in Vim-/- mice. This dissociates a direct role for desmin in corneal cell proliferation. Taken together, our findings illuminate a previously unappreciated pathogenic role for type III IF overexpression in corneal fibrotic conditions and also validate WFA as a powerful drug lead toward anti-fibrosis therapeutic development.
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U2 - 10.1074/jbc.M111.297150
DO - 10.1074/jbc.M111.297150
M3 - Article
C2 - 22117063
AN - SCOPUS:84862939695
SN - 0021-9258
VL - 287
SP - 989
EP - 1006
JO - Journal of Biological Chemistry
JF - Journal of Biological Chemistry
IS - 2
ER -