Surfactant Protein C Mouse Models: A Fit For Purpose Preclinical Platform For Advancing Discovery In And Treatment Of Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis

NIH RePORTER · NIH · U01 · $801,387 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

ABSTRACT Idiopathic Pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is a devastating interstitial lung disease (ILD) of older adults characterized by disruption of distal lung architecture that ultimately leads to scar formation, abnormal gas exchange, and respiratory failure. A key barrier to developing better therapeutic outcomes for IPF has been a dearth of translationally relevant preclinical models. Based on a recent paradigm shift wherein the concepts of repetitive injury to a dysfunctional, vulnerable, alveolar epithelium coupled with an abnormal wound healing response are postulated as disease “drivers”, new opportunities are emerging for therapeutic discovery in IPF. Mutations in the alveolar type 2 cell (AT2) restricted, Surfactant Protein C [SP-C] gene [SFTPC], have been found in sporadic and familial IPF and provide important clues for understanding IPF pathogenesis. To address the unmet need for IPF patients, this proposal builds upon on a strong foundation of our prior work characterizing the cell biology of SP-C biosynthesis that culminated in generation of two novel knock-in mouse models of spontaneous lung fibrosis already in hand which express clinical SP-C mutants in AT2 cells in an allelic and inducible fashion. Our Published Data has demonstrated that clinical IPF associated SFTPC mutations produce aberrant SP-C proprotein isoforms that functionally segregate into 2 AT2 phenotypes: ER stress induced by intracellular SP-C misfolding (BRICHOS) or autophagy/mitophagy impaired from proSP-C mistrafficking to non-native organelles (Non-BRICHOS). When expressed in the lung epithelium in vivo, both the non-BRICHOS mutant (SftpcI73T) and the BRICHOS mutant (SftpcC121G) are extremely toxic to the lung and each is sufficient to evoke a time-dependent, physiologically restrictive peripheral fibrotic lung phenotype that elaborates translationally relevant biomarkers reported in human IPF. This proposal will leverage these unique models for Discovery, Target ID/ Validation, and Proof of Concept studies aimed at mapping cell subpopulations and uncovering novel pathways driving lung fibrosis whilst providing a compelling translational platform to interface with other preclinical/translational platforms in this U01 consortium to accelerate IPF therapeutic development. In 3 specific aims, we propose to utilize Sftpc mutant mice to map cell populations, transcriptomic profiles, and cell-cell crosstalk repertoires arising during evolution of spontaneous fibrotic lung phenotypes [Specific Aim 1], identify novel disease relevant biomarker candidates elaborated during the aberrant injury-repair process [Specific Aim 2], and assess the important contributions of and mechanisms by which aging and sex impact IPF phenotypes [Specific Aim 3]. Importantly, many of the endpoints defined in Sftpc models will be cross-validated and contextualized using lung tissue and serum from a well-phenotyped human IPF biorepository. When completed, the impactful deliverables produced from th...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10321882
Project number
5U01HL152970-02
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA
Principal Investigator
MICHAEL FRANCIS BEERS
Activity code
U01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2022
Award amount
$801,387
Award type
5
Project period
2021-01-01 → 2024-12-31