TGF-β1/p53 signaling in renal fibrogenesis
Fibrotic disorders of the renal, pulmonary, cardiac, and hepatic systems are associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Effective therapies to prevent or curtail the advancement to organ failure, however, remain a major clinical challenge. Chronic kidney disease, in particular, constitutes...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Cellular signalling 2018-03, Vol.43, p.1-10 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Fibrotic disorders of the renal, pulmonary, cardiac, and hepatic systems are associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Effective therapies to prevent or curtail the advancement to organ failure, however, remain a major clinical challenge. Chronic kidney disease, in particular, constitutes an increasing medical burden affecting >15% of the US population. Regardless of etiology (diabetes, hypertension, ischemia, acute injury, urologic obstruction), persistently elevated TGF-β1 levels are causatively linked to the activation of profibrotic signaling networks and disease progression. TGF-β1 is the principal driver of renal fibrogenesis, a dynamic pathophysiologic process that involves tubular cell injury/apoptosis, infiltration of inflammatory cells, interstitial fibroblast activation and excess extracellular matrix synthesis/deposition leading to impaired kidney function and, eventually, to chronic and end-stage disease. TGF-β1 activates the ALK5 type I receptor (which phosphorylates SMAD2/3) as well as non-canonical (e.g., src kinase, EGFR, JAK/STAT, p53) pathways that collectively drive the fibrotic genomic program. Such multiplexed signal integration has pathophysiological consequences. Indeed, TGF-β1 stimulates the activation and assembly of p53-SMAD3 complexes required for transcription of the renal fibrotic genes plasminogen activator inhibitor-1, connective tissue growth factor and TGF-β1. Tubular-specific ablation of p53 in mice or pifithrin-α-mediated inactivation of p53 prevents epithelial G2/M arrest, reduces the secretion of fibrotic effectors and attenuates the transition from acute to chronic renal injury, further supporting the involvement of p53 in disease progression. This review focuses on the pathophysiology of TGF-β1-initiated renal fibrogenesis and the role of p53 as a regulator of profibrotic gene expression.
•Fibrosis the renal, pulmonary, cardiac, and hepatic systems are associated with significant morbidity and mortality.•TGF-β1 is the principal driver of renal fibrogenesis.•TGF-β1 activates SMAD2/3 via ALK5 as well as non-canonical pathways that collectively drive the fibrotic genomic program.•TGF-β1 stimulates p53-SMAD3 complex assembly required for transcription of renal fibrotic genes (PAI-1, CTGF, TGF-β1).•Focus on TGF-β1 signaling in renal fibrogenesis and the role of p53 as a regulator of profibrotic gene expression. |
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ISSN: | 0898-6568 1873-3913 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.cellsig.2017.11.005 |