高雄市生物科技發展協會|http://www.khba.org.tw
會員登入
記住帳號 自動登入
會員名錄
各式辦法
下載專區
留言板
您目前的位置:首頁 / 活動與新訊
Glycogen Metabolism May Play a Key Role in Pulmonary Fibrosis
活動日期:2023.09.27
2023.09.27  

Glycogen Metabolism May Play a Key Role in Pulmonary Fibrosis

https://www.the-scientist.com/news/glycogen-metabolism-may-play-a-key-role-in-pulmonary-fibrosis-71353

Researchers discover that glycogen and N-linked glycans accumulate in fibrotic regions of the lung and may be important for therapy development.

Charlene Lancaster, PhDCharlene Lancaster, PhD 

 

Ramon Sun and his lab standing next to their MALDI imaging mass spectrometer.

Ramon Sun and his team use MALDI-MSI to investigate aberrant metabolism in diseases including pulmonary fibrosis.

CAMERON SHEDLOCK

Most people take breathing for granted, but patients with interstitial lung diseases (ILDs) remember its importance every time they struggle to take a breath. Many patients with ILDs develop pulmonary fibrosis, which is the gradual scarring of the lungs. This progressive and fatal process results from excessive extracellular matrix production and deposition by lung fibroblasts and myofibroblasts, where collagen, elastin, and N-linked glycans are the major components of the matrix.1 Ultimately, pulmonary fibrosis results in the thickening of the alveolar walls, which limits oxygen uptake and causes difficulty breathing. ILDs with pulmonary fibrosis can result from genetic mutations, an underlying disease, or environmental exposure to microbes, smoke, or radiation.2 If clinicians are unable to find the cause of the fibrosis, they diagnose the patient with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF).

Currently, there are only two anti-fibrotic drugs endorsed by the Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of pulmonary fibrosis.3 Although both drugs slow the disease’s progression, neither treatment can completely stop or reverse the lung damage, highlighting the need for novel therapeutics. A recently published study in Nature Communications suggests that glycogen could be an important therapeutic target.4

Ramon Sun, a biochemist at the University of Florida and corresponding author of the paper, studies metabolic pathways involved in diseases such as Alzheimer’s disease, Ewing sarcoma, and lung cancer. When the covid pandemic shut down non-essential research, Sun was presented with the opportunity to study metabolic changes that occur during this infectious disease. “We actually got some covid-19 lungs from a person that ended up passing away,” recalled Sun.

These are no longer tools being developed in an engineering or chemistry lab somewhere that are still waiting to be perfected. These are ready to use … for biological research. 
Ramon Sun, University of Florida

Complex carbohydrate metabolism is irregular in many human disorders, including neurodegeneration and some cancers, but scientists did not know if it was abnormal in patients with covid. Sun and his research team first scanned the lung tissue sections using matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI)-mass spectrometry imaging (MALDI-MSI), which measured the metabolite abundance at individual pixels. They next used a technique called high dimensionality reduction and spatial clustering (HDR-SC) to sort pixels with similar metabolite levels into clusters. By comparing the clusters’ locations to pathological regions of the lung, the researchers observed that three clusters corresponded exactly to the early-, mid-, and end-stage fibrotic regions of the SARS-CoV-2 infected lungs, indicating that complex carbohydrate metabolism is aberrant in these areas. To further investigate this abnormality, they analyzed the abundance of complex carbohydrates and uncovered that N-linked glycans and glycogen accumulated within the lungs’ fibrotic regions.

Because patients with IPF have lung fibrosis, Sun wondered if complex carbohydrate metabolism was also altered in this condition. Using MALDI-MSI, they observed that glycogen- and N-linked glycan-rich areas corresponded to fibrotic regions, indicating that this carbohydrate signature could help clinicians identify fibrosis.

An image of lung tissue acquired using a MALDI imaging mass spectrometer.

Ramon Sun and colleagues acquired MALDI mass spectrometry images like this one, which shows glucose 6-phosphate abundance in a genetically engineered mouse model of lung cancer.

HARRISON CLARK

The researchers next questioned whether glycogen metabolism is directly involved in scar formation, as glycogen breakdown in myofibroblast lysosomes could supply the cells with substrates for N-linked glycan production and deposition. They employed mouse models that lacked enzymes required for glycogen catabolism and induced lung injury through intratracheal administration of bleomycin, an antibiotic used to treat cancer, which causes inflammation that later progresses to fibrosis. Through MALDI-MSI analysis, the researchers found less N-linked glycan deposition and fibrosis in the lungs of mice unable to break down glycogen, which suggested that the degradation of glycogen was important for pulmonary fibrosis development.

“I think the ability to localize signals within a tissue and find these coordinated events across the tissue region and compare these in a disease, like pulmonary fibrosis where you have such regional heterogeneity, was very powerful,” said Nicholas Banovich, a genomic scientist at the Translational Genomics Research Institute, who was not involved in the study. “I want to see these authors, as well as others in the field, continue to develop these imaging mass spectrometry approaches, and to see these platforms mature in the same way that we are starting to see the spatial transcriptomic platforms mature.” 

Sun is optimistic that this research could change the way that clinicians treat and diagnose pulmonary fibrosis. His team plans to find inhibitors targeting glycogen synthesis and degradation to develop into pulmonary fibrosis therapies. He also intends to create a spatial metabolomics-based protocol that could assist clinicians with pulmonary fibrosis diagnosis, saving them hours by pointing out regions that could be of interest. Additionally, Sun hopes that this paper inspires other researchers to employ spatial metabolomics techniques in their laboratories. “These are no longer tools being developed in an engineering or chemistry lab somewhere that are still waiting to be perfected. These are ready to use … for biological research,” Sun said.

REFERENCES

  1. Upagupta C, et al. Matrix abnormalities in pulmonary fibrosisEur Respir Rev. 2018;27(148).
  2. Wijsenbeek M, Cottin V. Spectrum of fibrotic lung diseasesN Engl J Med. 2020;383(10):958-968.
  3. Guo H, et al. Progress in understanding and treating idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis: recent insights and emerging therapiesFront Pharmacol. 2023;14.
  4. Conroy LR, et al. Spatial metabolomics reveals glycogen as an actionable target for pulmonary fibrosisNat Commun. 2023;14(1):2759.

 

 

 

共有310筆資料 頁數: 第4頁(共16頁)
編號 標題 新增日期
1 獨家》國衛院新研究:阿茲海默症乙型類澱粉蛋白會加速新冠病毒.. 2021.11.29
2 《Science》憂鬱症關鍵腦部受體GPR158結構終破解! 可望成治療.. 2021.11.25
3 國衛院領先全球》全身性紅斑狼瘡 致病源頭找到了 2021.11.09
4 Spiny Mice Appear to Regenerate Damaged Kidneys 2021.11.05
5 健康網》喜好口味一直變? 研究:味覺隨年紀增加而下降 2021.10.29
6 Delta後代傳播力更強! 英示警:亞系變異株「AY.4.2」崛起 2021.10.27
7 Red Blood Cells Activate Innate Immune System 2021.10.22
8 Mice that Survive Infection Pass on Stronger Immunit 2021.10.20
9 How Commensal Gut Bacteria Keep Pathogens in Check 2021.10.15
10 Repurposed Drug Reverses Signs of Alzheimer’s in Mice, Hu.. 2021.10.13
11 獨家》糖尿病可治癒!中研院團隊新發現有機會取代胰島素 2021.09.24
12 SARS-CoV-2’s Wide-Ranging Effects on the Body 2021.09.22
13 A Surge in Pandemic Research Shines a Spotlight on Preprints 2021.09.17
14 去年國人10大死因出爐 癌症、心臟病、肺炎仍居前三名 2021.06.18
15 中藥治武肺 清冠一號獲核准 2021.05.19
16 Brain’s Lymphatic System Tied to Alzheimer’s Symptoms in.. 2021.05.10
17 動脈硬化後還能逆轉嗎?美國研究:1項運動天天做,失智風險都.. 2021.04.08
18 癌王曙光 新胜肽分子阻轉移 2021.03.05
19 U.S. FDA Expands Approval of Pfizer’s LORBRENA® as F.. 2021.03.05
20 AI大數據建功 舊藥抗武肺 效力強30倍 2021.02.24
上一頁  1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16  下一頁
版權所有©2006 高雄市生物科技發展協會 所有文字、資料禁止轉用
地址:高雄市中正一路120號14樓之3 TEL:(07)591-9569 / FAX:(07)591-9018 / e-mail: khba.tw@gmail.com
累積進站人數:2897098