Skip to main content

Thyroid hormone inhibits lung fibrosis in mice by improving epithelial mitochondrial function.

Citation
Yu, G., et al. “Thyroid Hormone Inhibits Lung Fibrosis In Mice By Improving Epithelial Mitochondrial Function.”. Nature Medicine, pp. 39-49.
Center Yale University
Author Guoying Yu, Argyris Tzouvelekis, Rong Wang, Jose D Herazo-Maya, Gabriel H Ibarra, Anup Srivastava, Joao Pedro Werneck de Castro, Giuseppe DeIuliis, Farida Ahangari, Tony Woolard, Nachelle Aurelien, Rafael Arrojo E Drigo, Ye Gan, Morven Graham, Xinran Liu, Robert J Homer, Thomas S Scanlan, Praveen Mannam, Patty J Lee, Erica L Herzog, Antonio C Bianco, Naftali Kaminski
Abstract

Thyroid hormone (TH) is critical for the maintenance of cellular homeostasis during stress responses, but its role in lung fibrosis is unknown. Here we found that the activity and expression of iodothyronine deiodinase 2 (DIO2), an enzyme that activates TH, were higher in lungs from patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis than in control individuals and were correlated with disease severity. We also found that Dio2-knockout mice exhibited enhanced bleomycin-induced lung fibrosis. Aerosolized TH delivery increased survival and resolved fibrosis in two models of pulmonary fibrosis in mice (intratracheal bleomycin and inducible TGF-β1). Sobetirome, a TH mimetic, also blunted bleomycin-induced lung fibrosis. After bleomycin-induced injury, TH promoted mitochondrial biogenesis, improved mitochondrial bioenergetics and attenuated mitochondria-regulated apoptosis in alveolar epithelial cells both in vivo and in vitro. TH did not blunt fibrosis in Ppargc1a- or Pink1-knockout mice, suggesting dependence on these pathways. We conclude that the antifibrotic properties of TH are associated with protection of alveolar epithelial cells and restoration of mitochondrial function and that TH may thus represent a potential therapy for pulmonary fibrosis.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Nature medicine
Volume
24
Issue
1
Number of Pages
39-49
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1546-170X
DOI
10.1038/nm.4447
Alternate Journal
Nat. Med.
PMID
29200204
PMCID
PMC5760280
Download citation