Paul J. Wolters
University of California, San Francisco
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Featured researches published by Paul J. Wolters.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006
Kevin K. Kim; Matthias C. Kugler; Paul J. Wolters; Liliane Robillard; Michael G. Galvez; Alexis N. Brumwell; Dean Sheppard; Harold A. Chapman
Mechanisms leading to fibroblast accumulation during pulmonary fibrogenesis remain unclear. Although there is in vitro evidence of lung alveolar epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT), whether EMT occurs within the lung is currently unknown. Biopsies from fibrotic human lungs demonstrate epithelial cells with mesenchymal features, suggesting EMT. To more definitively test the capacity of alveolar epithelial cells for EMT, mice expressing β-galactosidase (β-gal) exclusively in lung epithelial cells were generated, and their fates were followed in an established model of pulmonary fibrosis, overexpression of active TGF-β1. β-gal-positive cells expressing mesenchymal markers accumulated within 3 weeks of in vivo TGF-β1 expression. The increase in vimentin-positive cells within injured lungs was nearly all β-gal-positive, indicating epithelial cells as the main source of mesenchymal expansion in this model. Ex vivo, primary alveolar epithelial cells cultured on provisional matrix components, fibronectin or fibrin, undergo robust EMT via integrin-dependent activation of endogenous latent TGF-β1. In contrast, primary cells cultured on laminin/collagen mixtures do not activate the TGF-β1 pathway and, if exposed to active TGF-β1, undergo apoptosis rather than EMT. These data reveal alveolar epithelial cells as progenitors for fibroblasts in vivo and implicate the provisional extracellular matrix as a key regulator of epithelial transdifferentiation during fibrogenesis.
Nature Medicine | 2009
Jian Liu; Adeline Divoux; Jiusong Sun; Jie Zhang; Karine Clément; Jonathan N. Glickman; Galina K. Sukhova; Paul J. Wolters; Juan Du; Cem Z. Görgün; Alessandro Doria; Peter Libby; Richard S. Blumberg; Barbara B. Kahn; Gökhan S. Hotamisligil; Guo-Ping Shi
Although mast cell functions have classically been related to allergic responses, recent studies indicate that these cells contribute to other common diseases such as multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, atherosclerosis, aortic aneurysm and cancer. This study presents evidence that mast cells also contribute to diet-induced obesity and diabetes. For example, white adipose tissue (WAT) from obese humans and mice contain more mast cells than WAT from their lean counterparts. Furthermore, in the context of mice on a Western diet, genetically induced deficiency of mast cells, or their pharmacological stabilization, reduces body weight gain and levels of inflammatory cytokines, chemokines and proteases in serum and WAT, in concert with improved glucose homeostasis and energy expenditure. Mechanistic studies reveal that mast cells contribute to WAT and muscle angiogenesis and associated cell apoptosis and cathepsin activity. Adoptive transfer experiments of cytokine-deficient mast cells show that these cells, by producing interleukin-6 (IL-6) and interferon-γ (IFN-γ), contribute to mouse adipose tissue cysteine protease cathepsin expression, apoptosis and angiogenesis, thereby promoting diet-induced obesity and glucose intolerance. Our results showing reduced obesity and diabetes in mice treated with clinically available mast cell-stabilizing agents suggest the potential of developing new therapies for these common human metabolic disorders.
Nature Medicine | 2007
Jiusong Sun; Galina K. Sukhova; Paul J. Wolters; Min Yang; Shiro Kitamoto; Peter Libby; Lindsey MacFarlane; Jon Mallen-St. Clair; Guo-Ping Shi
Mast cells contribute importantly to allergic and innate immune responses by releasing various preformed and newly synthesized mediators. Previous studies have shown mast cell accumulation in human atherosclerotic lesions. This report establishes the direct participation of mast cells in atherogenesis in low-density lipoprotein receptor–deficient (Ldlr−/−) mice. Atheromata from compound mutant Ldlr−/− KitW-sh/W-sh mice showed decreased lesion size, lipid deposition, T-cell and macrophage numbers, cell proliferation and apoptosis, but increased collagen content and fibrous cap development. In vivo, adoptive transfer of syngeneic wild-type or tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α-deficient mast cells restored atherogenesis to Ldlr−/−KitW-sh/W-sh mice. Notably, neither interleukin (IL)-6- nor interferon (IFN)-γ-deficient mast cells did so, indicating that the inhibition of atherogenesis in Ldlr−/−KitW-sh/W-sh mice resulted from the absence of mast cells and mast cell–derived IL-6 and IFN-γ. Compared with wild-type or TNF-α-deficient mast cells, those lacking IL-6 or IFN-γ did not induce expression of proatherogenic cysteine proteinase cathepsins from vascular cells in vitro or affect cathepsin and matrix metalloproteinase activities in atherosclerotic lesions, implying that mast cell–derived IL-6 and IFN-γ promote atherogenesis by augmenting the expression of matrix-degrading proteases. These observations establish direct participation of mast cells and mast cell–derived IL-6 and IFN-γ in mouse atherogenesis and provide new mechanistic insight into the pathogenesis of this common disease.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2008
Kevin K. Kim; Ying Wei; Charles Szekeres; Matthias C. Kugler; Paul J. Wolters; Marla L. Hill; James A. Frank; Alexis N. Brumwell; Sarah E. Wheeler; Jordan A. Kreidberg; Harold A. Chapman
Pulmonary fibrosis, in particular idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF), results from aberrant wound healing and scarification. One population of fibroblasts involved in the fibrotic process is thought to originate from lung epithelial cells via epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT). Indeed, alveolar epithelial cells (AECs) undergo EMT in vivo during experimental fibrosis and ex vivo in response to TGF-beta1. As the ECM critically regulates AEC responses to TGF-beta1, we explored the role of the prominent epithelial integrin alpha3beta1 in experimental fibrosis by generating mice with lung epithelial cell-specific loss of alpha3 integrin expression. These mice had a normal acute response to bleomycin injury, but they exhibited markedly decreased accumulation of lung myofibroblasts and type I collagen and did not progress to fibrosis. Signaling through beta-catenin has been implicated in EMT; we found that in primary AECs, alpha3 integrin was required for beta-catenin phosphorylation at tyrosine residue 654 (Y654), formation of the pY654-beta-catenin/pSmad2 complex, and initiation of EMT, both in vitro and in vivo during the fibrotic phase following bleomycin injury. Finally, analysis of lung tissue from IPF patients revealed the presence of pY654-beta-catenin/pSmad2 complexes and showed accumulation of pY654-beta-catenin in myofibroblasts. These findings demonstrate epithelial integrin-dependent profibrotic crosstalk between beta-catenin and Smad signaling and support the hypothesis that EMT is an important contributor to pathologic fibrosis.
Nature Genetics | 2013
Tasha E. Fingerlin; Elissa Murphy; Weiming Zhang; Anna L. Peljto; Kevin K. Brown; Mark P. Steele; James E. Loyd; Gregory P. Cosgrove; David A. Lynch; Steve D. Groshong; Harold R. Collard; Paul J. Wolters; Williamson Ziegler Bradford; Karl Kossen; Scott D. Seiwert; Roland M. du Bois; Christine Kim Garcia; Megan S. Devine; Gunnar Gudmundsson; Helgi J. Ísaksson; Naftali Kaminski; Yingze Zhang; Kevin F. Gibson; Lisa H. Lancaster; Joy D. Cogan; Wendi R. Mason; Toby M. Maher; Philip L. Molyneaux; Athol U. Wells; Miriam F. Moffatt
We performed a genome-wide association study of non-Hispanic, white individuals with fibrotic idiopathic interstitial pneumonias (IIPs; n = 1,616) and controls (n = 4,683), with follow-up replication analyses in 876 cases and 1,890 controls. We confirmed association with TERT at 5p15, MUC5B at 11p15 and the 3q26 region near TERC, and we identified seven newly associated loci (Pmeta = 2.4 × 10−8 to 1.1 × 10−19), including FAM13A (4q22), DSP (6p24), OBFC1 (10q24), ATP11A (13q34), DPP9 (19p13) and chromosomal regions 7q22 and 15q14-15. Our results suggest that genes involved in host defense, cell-cell adhesion and DNA repair contribute to risk of fibrotic IIPs.
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2011
Joyce S. Lee; Jay H. Ryu; Brett M. Elicker; Carmen P. Lydell; Kirk D. Jones; Paul J. Wolters; Talmadge E. King; Harold R. Collard
RATIONALE Gastroesophageal reflux (GER) is highly prevalent in patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF). Chronic microaspiration secondary to GER may play a role in the pathogenesis and natural history of IPF. OBJECTIVES To investigate the relationship between GER-related variables and survival time in patients with IPF. METHODS Regression analysis was used to investigate the relationship between GER-related variables and survival time in a retrospectively identified cohort of patients with well-characterized IPF from two academic medical centers. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS Two hundred four patients were identified for inclusion. GER-related variables were common in this cohort: reported symptoms of GER (34%), a history of GER disease (45%), reported use of GER medications (47%), and Nissen fundoplication (5%). These GER-related variables were significantly associated with longer survival time on unadjusted analysis. After adjustment, the use of GER medications was an independent predictor of longer survival time. In addition, the use of gastroesophageal reflux medications was associated with a lower radiologic fibrosis score. These findings were present regardless of center. CONCLUSIONS The reported use of GER medications is associated with decreased radiologic fibrosis and is an independent predictor of longer survival time in patients with IPF. These findings further support the hypothesis that GER and chronic microaspiration may play important roles in the pathobiology of IPF.
Annual Review of Pathology-mechanisms of Disease | 2014
Paul J. Wolters; Harold R. Collard; Kirk D. Jones
Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is a fibrosing interstitial lung disease associated with aging that is characterized by the histopathological pattern of usual interstitial pneumonia. Although an understanding of the pathogenesis of IPF is incomplete, recent advances delineating specific clinical and pathologic features of IPF have led to better definition of the molecular pathways that are pathologically activated in the disease. In this review we highlight several of these advances, with a focus on genetic predisposition to IPF and how genetic changes, which occur primarily in epithelial cells, lead to activation of profibrotic pathways in epithelial cells. We then discuss the pathologic changes within IPF fibroblasts and the extracellular matrix, and we conclude with a summary of how these profibrotic pathways may be interrelated.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2007
Jiusong Sun; Galina K. Sukhova; Min Yang; Paul J. Wolters; Lindsey MacFarlane; Peter Libby; Chongxiu Sun; Yadong Zhang; Jianming Liu; Terri L. Ennis; Rebecca Knispel; Wanfen Xiong; Robert W. Thompson; B. Timothy Baxter; Guo-Ping Shi
Abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA), an inflammatory disease, involves leukocyte recruitment, immune responses, inflammatory cytokine production, vascular remodeling, neovascularization, and vascular cell apoptosis, all of which contribute to aortic dilatation. This study demonstrates that mast cells, key participants in human allergic immunity, participate in AAA pathogenesis in mice. Mast cells were found to accumulate in murine AAA lesions. Mast cell-deficient KitW-sh/KitW-sh mice failed to develop AAA elicited by elastase perfusion or periaortic chemical injury. KitW-sh/KitW-sh mice had reduced aortic expansion and internal elastic lamina degradation; decreased numbers of macrophages, CD3+ T lymphocytes, SMCs, apoptotic cells, and CD31+ microvessels; and decreased levels of aortic tissue IL-6 and IFN-gamma. Activation of mast cells in WT mice via C48/80 injection resulted in enhanced AAA growth while mast cell stabilization with disodium cromoglycate diminished AAA formation. Mechanistic studies demonstrated that mast cells participated in angiogenesis, aortic SMC apoptosis, and matrix-degrading protease expression. Reconstitution of KitW-sh/KitW-sh mice with bone marrow-derived mast cells from WT or TNF-alpha-/- mice, but not from IL-6-/- or IFN-gamma-/- mice, caused susceptibility to AAA formation to be regained. These results demonstrate that mast cells participate in AAA pathogenesis in mice by releasing proinflammatory cytokines IL-6 and IFN-gamma, which may induce aortic SMC apoptosis, matrix-degrading protease expression, and vascular wall remodeling, important hallmarks of arterial aneurysms.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001
Paul J. Wolters; Christine T. N. Pham; Diego J. Muilenburg; Timothy J. Ley; George H. Caughey
Dipeptidyl peptidase I (DPPI) is the sole activator in vivo of several granule-associated serine proteases of cytotoxic lymphocytes. In vitro, DPPI also activates mast cell chymases and tryptases. To determine whether DPPI is essential for their activation in vivo, we used enzyme histochemical and immunohistochemical approaches and solution-based activity assays to study these enzymes in tissues and bone marrow-derived mast cells (BMMCs) from DPPI +/+ and DPPI −/− mice. We find that DPPI −/− mast cells contain normal amounts of immunoreactive chymases but no chymase activity, indicating that DPPI is essential for chymase activation and suggesting that DPPI −/− mice are functional chymase knockouts. The absence of DPPI and chymase activity does not affect the growth, granularity, or staining characteristics of BMMCs and, despite prior predictions, does not alter IgE-mediated exocytosis of histamine. In contrast, the level of active tryptase (mMCP-6) in DPPI −/− BMMCs is 25% that of DPPI +/− BMMCs. These findings indicate that DPPI is not essential for mMCP-6 activation but does influence the total amount of active mMCP-6 in mast cells and therefore may be an important, but not exclusive mechanism for tryptase activation.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2007
Jun Araya; Stephanie Cambier; Jennifer A. Markovics; Paul J. Wolters; David M. Jablons; Arthur Hill; Walter E. Finkbeiner; Kirk D. Jones; V. Courtney Broaddus; Dean Sheppard; Andrea Barzcak; Yuanyuan Xiao; David J. Erle; Stephen L. Nishimura
Squamous metaplasia (SM) is common in smokers and is associated with airway obstruction in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). A major mechanism of airway obstruction in COPD is thickening of the small airway walls. We asked whether SM actively contributes to airway wall thickening through alteration of epithelial-mesenchymal interactions in COPD. Using immunohistochemical staining, airway morphometry, and fibroblast culture of lung samples from COPD patients; genome-wide analysis of an in vitro model of SM; and in vitro modeling of human airway epithelial-mesenchymal interactions, we provide evidence that SM, through the increased secretion of IL-1beta, induces a fibrotic response in adjacent airway fibroblasts. We identify a pivotal role for integrin-mediated TGF-beta activation in amplifying SM and driving IL-1beta-dependent profibrotic mesenchymal responses. Finally, we show that SM correlates with increased severity of COPD and that fibroblast expression of the integrin alpha(v)beta(8), which is the major mediator of airway fibroblast TGF-beta activation, correlated with disease severity and small airway wall thickening in COPD. Our findings have identified TGF-beta as a potential therapeutic target for COPD.