Abstract
The regenerative capacity of lung and liver is sometimes impaired by chronic or overwhelming injury. Orthotopic transplantation of parenchymal stem cells to damaged organs might reinstate their self-repair ability. However, parenchymal cell engraftment is frequently hampered by the microenvironment in diseased recipient organs. Here, we show that targeting both the vascular niche and perivascular fibroblasts establishes “hospitable soil” to foster incorporation of “seed”, in this case the engraftment of parenchymal cells in injured organs. Specifically, ectopic induction of endothelial cell (EC)-expressed paracrine/angiocrine hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) and inhibition of perivascular NADPH Oxidase 4 (NOX4) synergistically enabled reconstitution of mouse and human parenchymal cells in damaged organs. Reciprocally, genetic knockout of Hgf in mouse ECs (HgfiΔEC/iΔEC) aberrantly upregulated perivascular NOX4 during liver and lung regeneration. Dysregulated HGF and NOX4 pathways subverted the function of vascular and perivascular cells from an epithelially-inductive niche to a microenvironment that inhibited parenchymal reconstitution. Perivascular NOX4 induction in HgfiΔEC/iΔEC mice recapitulated the phenotype of human and mouse fibrotic livers and lungs. Consequently, EC-directed HGF and NOX4 inhibitor GKT137831 stimulated regenerative integration of mouse and human parenchymal cells in chronically injured lung and liver. Our data suggest that targeting dysfunctional perivascular and vascular cells in diseased organs can bypass fibrosis and enable reparative cell engraftment to reinstate lung and liver regeneration.
Introduction
The self-repair capacity of liver and lung tissue is sometimes prohibited by overwhelming or persistent injury (1–19). Transplantation of parenchymal stem cells might aid in reinstating the regenerative ability (20–38), but efficient engraftment of parenchymal cells is handicapped by the prohibitive fibrotic microenvironment in diseased organs. Therefore, designing effective cell therapy strategies requires understanding how microenvironmental cues regulate parenchymal regeneration and fibrosis in the damaged lung and liver (39–47).
Surgical resection of liver or lung lobes by partial hepatectomy (PH) or pneumonectomy (PNX) triggers facultative regeneration without fibrosis (48–52). Liver and lung can also resolve fibrosis after acute injury (53–55). In contrast, chronic injury stimulates exuberant scar formation and fibrosis, leading to hepatic and pulmonary failure (56–63). How fibrosis is resolved after PH, PNX, or acute injury but triggered by chronic or overwhelming injury remains incompletely known (64–66). Since fibroblasts are the major cell type that produces matrix proteins during scar formation (59, 67–69), we hypothesized that modulating the interplay between perivascular fibroblasts and endothelial cells (ECs) might obviate fibrosis in the liver (2, 48, 49, 52) and lung (47, 70–73), forming an epithelially-inductive niche for parenchymal cell reconstitution and regeneration (74, 75).
Here we find that EC-expressed HGF prevents aberrant activation of NADPH Oxidase 4 (NOX4) (56, 76, 77) in perivascular fibroblasts after lung and liver injury. Induction of HGF and inhibition of NOX4 in damaged organs promotes the incorporation of regenerative parenchymal cells. We also devised a strategy to edit both vascular and perivascular cells by combining endothelial Hgf gene delivery with NOX4 inhibition. This dual niche-editing strategy enhanced functional reconstitution of mouse and human parenchymal cells, inducing fibrosis-free organ repair. Our data suggest that targeting vascular and perivascular cells in diseased organs might transform the prohibitive microenvironment to an epithelially-inductive niche that bypasses fibrosis and facilitates engraftment of regenerative progenitor cells.
Results
Repeated lung and liver injuries prohibit the incorporation of grafted parenchymal cells
We first tested the efficiency of parenchymal cell engraftment in both normal and injured mouse lung and liver. Non-injured and injured lungs were transplanted with type 2 alveolar epithelial cells (AEC2s), cells that contribute to lung epithelialization (14, 21, 24, 26) (Fig. 1A–B, fig. S1A), and livers were grafted with hepatocytes mediating hepatic reconstitution (27, 33, 78) (Fig. 1C–D, fig. S1B). Lung injury was induced by intratracheal injection of bleomycin (Bleo) or hydrochloric acid (Acid) (46), and liver repair was triggered by intraperitoneal injection of carbon tetrachloride (CCl4). To trace in vivo incorporation of transplanted parenchymal cells, AEC2-specific surfactant protein C-CreERT2 (Sftpc-CreERT2) mice (14) and hepatocyte-specific Albumin-Cre mice were bred with TdTomato reporter mice. Isolated TdTomato+ AEC2 or hepatocytes were transplanted into mice via intratracheal or intrasplenic injection, respectively. We found that there was little parenchymal cell incorporation in the non-injured lung or liver (fig. S1A, B). In contrast, AEC2s and hepatocytes integrated into the injured lung or liver after the 3rd Bleo, Acid or CCl4 injection (Fig. 1B, D).
Injured lung and liver either undergo fibrosis-free repair or develop fibrosis. A single Bleo or Acid injection triggers re-epithelialization in the injured lung without triggering fibrosis, but fibrosis starts to occur after repetitive injury (15). Similarly, CCl4 injection stimulates hepatic regeneration after three injections, but the injured liver ceases to resolve fibrosis after multiple CCl4 injections (16). Indeed, parenchymal cells failed to incorporate into the liver and lung after more than six injections of Bleo, Acid, or CCl4 (Fig. 1B, D, fig. S1C), the stage at which injured liver and lung developed fibrosis (fig. S1D, E).
EC-produced HGF mitigates expression of pro-fibrotic NOX4 protein in perivascular fibroblasts
We then defined the microenvironment-derived cues that foster the incorporation of transplanted hepatocytes and AEC2s. Vascular ECs lining liver sinusoids or pulmonary capillaries were shown to elicit parenchymal regeneration (2, 16, 52, 79, 80). EC-produced HGF stimulates proliferation of parenchymal cells for organ repair (16, 48, 80–83). Thus, we tested whether endothelial HGF influences parenchymal cell engraftment. Mice expressing EC-specific VE-cadherin-driven CreERT2 (Cdh5-(PAC)-CreERT2) (84) were bred with floxed Hgf mice (Fig. 1E). Mice were injected with tamoxifen to induce EC-specific ablation of Hgf (HgfiΔEC/iΔEC), and EC-specific Hgf heterozygous knockout (HgfiΔEC/+) mice were used as controls (fig. S2A).
Lung and liver repair were analyzed in HgfiΔEC/iΔEC and control mice after the 3rd Bleo or CCl4 injection (Fig. 1E). Compared with control mice, there was increased lethality in HgfiΔEC/iΔEC mice after liver or lung injury, which was associated with elevated tissue destruction and increased fibrosis in HgfiΔEC/iΔEC liver and lung (Fig. 1F–I, fig. S2B–C). Consequently, incorporation of transplanted parenchymal cells was suppressed in the injured HgfiΔEC/iΔEC lung or liver, as compared with than that of controls (Fig. 1J, K). Hence, EC-produced HGF promotes organ repair, resolves fibrosis, and facilitates the engraftment of parenchymal cells in the injured lung and liver.
HgfiΔEC/iΔEC mice were then characterized in another liver regeneration model induced by PH. Qualitative immunostaining analysis suggested that hepatocyte proliferation after PH was lower in HgfiΔEC/iΔEC mice than controls (Fig. 2A), and collagen deposition and cell apoptosis were elevated in the liver of hepatectomized HgfiΔEC/iΔEC mice compared to controls (Fig. 2B–C). Immunostaining and ELISA analysis of Malondialdehyde (MDA) revealed markedly higher peroxide formation in HgfiΔEC/iΔEC mouse liver after PH (Fig. 2D–E). Hepatectomized HgfiΔEC/iΔEC mice also exhibited increased lethality and liver damage than controls, as evidenced by higher serum bilirubin concentration (fig. S2D–E). Thus, HGF expressed by ECs stimulates parenchymal cell expansion and resolves fibrosis during PH-induced liver regeneration.
Increased fibrosis and oxidative damage in HgfiΔEC/iΔEC mice led us to identify the influence of endothelial HGF on perivascular fibroblasts. HGF was shown to attenuate the expression of the NOX family of proteins that regulate redox balance (85), and elevated NOX activity after injury stimulates fibrosis (56, 76). Indeed, after PH and three CCl4 injections, NOX4 expression was increased in the liver of HgfiΔEC/iΔEC mice than that of controls (Fig. 2F–H). Furthermore, NOX4 protein was found to be preferentially distributed in perivascular fibroblasts of hepatectomized HgfiΔEC/iΔEC mice (Fig. 2I). As such, development of fibrosis in HgfiΔEC/iΔEC mice in liver regeneration is associated with NOX4 induction in perivascular fibroblasts.
To establish the correlation between endothelial HGF and perivascular NOX4 in fibrogenesis, we adopted a liver-specific gene transduction system (86). Bolus injection of a large volume of gene material via tail vein caused gene transduction in the mouse liver (fig. S2F). This system allowed us to study the contribution of Nox4 to liver regeneration in HgfiΔEC/iΔEC mice. Silencing Nox4 expression in hepatectomized or CCl4-injured HgfiΔEC/iΔEC mice promoted liver regeneration and blocked fibrosis (fig. S2G–J). Thus, endothelial HGF stimulates fibrosis-free liver repair at least partially by suppressing NOX4 upregulation in perivascular fibroblasts.
We then sought to define the hepatic-protective effect of endothelial HGF in a liver cholestasis model, bile duct ligation (BDL). The common bile duct was ligated and resected to induce biliary epithelial injury. BDL caused perivascular NOX4 protein upregulation and stimulated qualitatively higher degrees of cell apoptosis, peroxide formation, and collagen deposition in HgfiΔEC/iΔEC livers than controls (Fig. 2J–O, fig. S2K). As such, loss of HGF expression in EC might stimulate perivascular fibroblast activation in cirrhotic liver.
The clinical relevance of the HGF-NOX4 axis was investigated in samples of liver from human cirrhotic patients. Immunostaining of NOX4 and desmin showed that the extent of fibrosis positively correlated with NOX4 protein expression in the cirrhotic livers (Fig. 3A). NOX4 was qualitatively upregulated in perivascular desmin+ fibroblasts adjacent to VE-cadherin+ ECs (Fig. 3B–D, fig. S3A–H). Thus, NOX4 upregulation in perivascular fibroblasts of injured HgfiΔEC/iΔEC liver was reminiscent of aberrant expression of perivascular NOX4 in human cirrhotic livers.
Since tumor growth factor-β (TGF-β) stimulates NOX4 expression in fibroblasts (56, 76), we investigated whether endothelial HGF influences NOX4 expression in fibroblasts in the presence of TGF-β. Human and mouse hepatic stellate cells were treated with TGF-β with or without HGF. HGF ameliorated NOX4 expression and activity in human and mouse stellate cells after TGF-β stimulation (Fig. 3E–F, fig. S3I–J). An endothelial-stellate cell co-culture system was used to explore the crosstalk between endothelial HGF and fibroblast NOX4 (Fig. 3G). NOX4 protein expression was lower in stellate cells cultured with ECs overexpressing HGF (ECHGF) than those with control ECs with scrambled sequence (ECSrb) (Fig. 3H–J).
Targeting vascular and perivascular cells improves the engraftment of mouse and human parenchymal cells in fibrotic livers
Building on the finding that endothelial HGF promotes liver regeneration, we postulated that ectopic expression of HGF in the liver ECs (87–89) could enhance hepatocyte engraftment in the injured liver. To test this hypothesis, we adopted a pseudotyped lentivirus system that conjugates with immunoglobulin antibody at the viral surface (90). Coupling of pseudotyped lentivirus with antibody recognizing EC antigen CD31 allows for gene transfer in ECs (15). Mouse CD31 antibody (Mec13.3) was conjugated with virus encoding green fluorescent protein (Gfp), scrambled sequence (Srb), or Hgf, resulting in Mec13-Gfp, Mec13-Srb, and Mec13-Hgf viruses.
Intra-splenic injection was employed to localize Mec13-virus in the hepatic vascular bed. Compared to control (Mec13-Srb), Mec13-Hgf attenuated perivascular NOX4 expression in BDL-injured liver (Fig. 4A–B, fig. S4A). Subsequently, we tested whether combining Mec13-Hgf with NOX4 inhibitor GKT137831 (GKT) would more efficiently provoke regeneration in the injured liver. GKT was administered to injured mice together with Mec13-Hgf (Mec13-Hgf + GKT). Mec13-Hgf + GKT substantially lowered peroxide formation and hydroxyproline amounts after BDL, more than any other tested treatments (Fig. 4C–E). Moreover, Mec13-Hgf + GKT efficiently promoted the incorporation of grafted mouse hepatocytes (Fig. 4F) and induced the most efficacious hepatic repair in all tested approaches (Fig. 4G–I).
We then tested how dual niche-editing influences reconstitution of human hepatocytes (Fig. 5A). Immunodeficient NOD-Prkdcem26Cd52Il2rgem26Cd22/Nju (NCG) mice treated with Mec13-Srb, Mec13-Hgf, GKT, or Mec13-Hgf + GKT after BDL. Human hepatocytes were transplanted into the injured mice via intrasplenic injection. Mec13-Hgf + GKT enhanced the incorporation of GFP-labeled human hepatocytes in the damaged liver, and these grafted hepatocytes maintained the expression of hepatocyte marker cholesterol 7alpha-hydroxylase (CYP7A1) (Fig. 5B). NCG mice treated with Mec13-Hgf + GKT + human hepatocytes showed reduced cell death in the liver, regenerated hepatic architecture and function, and higher serum human albumin concentration than all other test groups (Fig. 5C–G, fig. S4B). Therefore, dual editing of vascular and perivascular cells bypasses fibrosis to enable the engraftment of mouse and human parenchymal cells, promoting hepatic regeneration (Fig. 5H).
Endothelial HGF suppresses pro-fibrotic expression of NOX4 in perivascular lung fibroblasts
To explore the generality of the observed regenerative effect of endothelial HGF, we tested HgfiΔEC/iΔEC mice in a lung alveolar regeneration model triggered by PNX. PNX stimulates functional growth of the intact right lung lobe after surgical resection of the left lung lobe (Fig. 6A). Compared to the controls, HgfiΔEC/iΔEC mice had increased peroxide formation and NOX4 protein expression after PNX (Fig. 6B–C), which was accompanied by inhibited restoration of lung mass and function, and qualitatively elevated cell apoptosis (fig. S5A–D). Notably, NOX4 was qualitatively upregulated in perivascular fibroblasts in pneumonectomized HgfiΔEC/iΔEC mice (Fig. 6D). Hence, endothelial HGF has a similarly important role in driving lung alveolar regeneration and obviating fibrosis after PNX.
To investigate the relationship between endothelial HGF and NOX4 in lung regeneration, we silenced Nox4 in injured mouse lungs (56). Nox4 shRNA was administered intratracheally into the pneumonectomized HgfiΔEC/iΔEC mice (fig. S5E). This method blocked the upregulation of NOX4 in perivascular fibroblasts, prevented fibrosis, and restored alveolar function in pneumonectomized HgfiΔEC/iΔEC lungs (fig. S5F–I). Of note, HGF blocked upregulation of NOX4 protein in cultured human and mouse lung fibroblasts after TGF-β treatment (Fig. 6E–F, fig. S6A–B), and incubating human lung fibroblasts with ECHGF abrogated NOX4 protein induction by TGF-β (Fig. 6G–H, fig. S6C). The degree of NOX4 upregulation in perivascular fibroblasts correlated with fibrosis grade in human fibrotic lung tissue samples (Fig. 6I), and perivascular NOX4 induction in HgfiΔEC/iΔEC mouse lungs after PNX recapitulated NOX4 expression in perivascular fibroblasts of human fibrotic lungs (Fig. 6J–L, fig. S6D–K). Therefore, endothelial HGF suppresses expression of NOX4 in perivascular lung fibroblasts, which may contribute to fibrogenesis in diseased human lungs.
Targeting dysfunctional vascular and perivascular cells enhances engraftment of AEC2s in fibrotic lungs
We investigated the therapeutic effect of Mec13-Hgf and GKT after repeated Bleo or Acid injections using mouse models. Jugular vein injection of Mec13-Hgf (15) in mice inhibited NOX4 upregulation in injured lung fibroblasts (Fig. 7A, B). Qualitative Sirius red staining implicated that Mec13-Hgf + GKT reduced fibrosis in the injured lungs (Fig. 7C). Moreover, Mec13-Hgf + GKT enhanced incorporation of AEC2s in damaged lungs, which stimulated lung regeneration more efficiently than any other treatments (Fig. 7D–F). These data suggest that editing dysfunctional vascular and perivascular cells can subvert an epithelially-prohibitive microenvironment to an epithelially-active niche, enabling regenerative therapy for fibrosis (fig. S7A).
We also tested the efficacy of Mec13-Hgf + GKT on promoting reconstitution of human AEC2s. NCG mice were subjected to either Bleo or Acid injury and transplanted with GFP-labeled human AEC2s after Mec13-Srb, Mec13-Hgf, GKT, or Mec13-Hgf + GKT treatment (Fig. 8A). Mec13-Hgf + GKT efficiently promoted human AEC2 incorporation in the recipient mouse lungs (Fig. 8B). This engraftment was accompanied by blunted cell death, restored alveolar architecture, and recovered gas exchange function (Fig. 8C–E, fig. S7B).
Discussion
The microenvironment of recipient organ, the “soil”, can regulate the efficiency of cell engraftment. Establishing an epithelially inductive microenvironment in diseased organs might facilitate the engraftment of regenerative parenchymal cells. In this study, we find that vascular and perivascular niche cells jointly regulate the incorporation of transplanted alveolar progenitor cell or hepatocyte in damaged organs. Parenchymal cell incorporation in injured lungs and livers requires expression of HGF in the endothelial niche and suppression of perivascular NOX4 activity. Moreover, incorporated parenchymal cells synergize with targeted niches to stimulate the most efficacious organ repair. Thus, reinstating self-repair capacity of diseased lung and liver might require the co-operation between the pro-regenerative microenvironment and grafted parenchymal stem/progenitor cells.
Fibrosis in injured organs might hamper engraftment of parenchymal cells. Therefore, understanding of how fibrosis is resolved during organ regeneration is helpful for devising cellular therapy for various diseases (1, 5). HGF has an important role in promoting parenchymal cell expansion (83, 91–94). Here we found that EC-expressed HGF contributes to resolving lung and liver fibrosis, which is at least partially mediated by suppressing NOX4 expression in perivascular fibroblasts. In PH and PNX models that induce parenchymal regeneration without fibrosis, deletion of Hgf in mouse EC blocked regeneration and caused fibrosis. Reciprocally, in mouse liver and lung fibrosis models, ectopic expression of Hgf in EC prevented activation of perivascular fibroblast and suppressed fibrosis. These genetic model-based in vivo and in vitro cultivation data implicate that in addition to stimulating parenchymal reconstitution, endothelial HGF also serves as a key molecule to prevent fibrosis.
Therapeutically, NOX4 inhibition synergized with endothelial HGF induction to stimulate efficacious parenchymal reconstitution and regeneration. This synergistic effect may be due to several layers of mechanisms. First, reduced NOX4 in perivascular cells by endothelial HGF might require less NOX4 inhibitor to reach sufficient inhibition. Second, reducing oxidative stress in the damaged organs by NOX4 inhibitor may promote production or activation of HGF from the vascular niche. The additive effects by endothelial HGF and NOX4 inhibition might also rely on operative mechanisms independent of the HGF-NOX4 axis. Endothelial HGF can exert various regenerative functions (91–94), and this dual editing approach might utilize both NOX4-dependent and NOX4-independnet mechanisms. NOX4 inhibition prevents parenchymal cell death after injury (95), offering hepatogenic or alveologenic effects that extend beyond HGF signaling. As such, our dual editing approach might exploit various functions of HGF and NOX4 that are independent of the HGF-NOX4 axis.
HGF expression triggered in the vascular niche after parenchymal injury may act as a protective response. The vast surface area of hepatic or pulmonary microvasculature is ideal to deploy enormous amounts of paracrine growth factors within a short time period (2, 75, 96–98). Several endothelial receptors were demonstrated to mediate HGF upregulation in ECs, including VEGFR1 (48), VEGFR2 (80), and CXCR7 (16). Conceivably, these endothelial receptors sense tissue mass loss or chemical injury to trigger HGF expression. Loss of these pathways might not only impair regeneration but also cause fibrosis. It was shown before that activation of Smad2/3 blocks HGF transcription in keratinocytes (99). Whether the TGF/Smad pathway mediates the subversion of epithelially-inductive vascular niche function during parenchymal repair can be explored in the future.
The translational value of the dual niche-editing system could be improved through alternate gene transfer methods or coupling to different inhibitors or therapeutics. Pseudotyped lentivirus accomplishes EC-selective gene transfer at the expense of low efficiency; a therapeutically applicable EC gene editing approach might require a clinically tested gene transfer system with higher efficiency. Engineered Adeno-associated virus (AAV) can be chemically conjugated with an endothelial targeting moiety via process such as biotin-avidin interaction (87, 89). Administration of EC-targeted AAV can potentially offer more efficacious and safer vascular gene editing in fibrotic organs. Other therapeutics can be exploited to target the dysfunctional perivascular niche in conjugation with NOX4 inhibitor.
Taken together, we show that vascular and perivascular cells jointly influence the engraftment of parenchymal progenitor cells in the inured lungs and livers. Implementing cell transplantation with niche editing efficiently induces organ regeneration. Our proof-of-principle evidence may help develop cell therapy approaches to enable fibrosis-free repair in various organs.
Materials and Methods
Study Design
We combined vascular Hgf gene expression with NOX4 inhibition via GKT137831 to edit the vascular and perivascular niches in fibrotic lung and liver. The contribution of vascular and perivascular niches were demonstrated by suppressed parenchymal cell engraftment in host mice lacking endothelial HGF and overexpressing perivascular NOX4. The role of endothelial HGF in promoting parenchymal regeneration and bypassing fibrosis in liver and lung was established using 1) EC-specific knockout (HgfiΔEC/iΔEC) mice and 2) complementary lung and liver regeneration and repair models. Both AEC2s and hepatocytes were grafted into recipient mice after treatment with EC-targeted Hgf, GKT137831, or combination therapy. We analyzed the extent of incorporation of transplanted mouse and human parenchymal cells in the recipient mice, and tested the efficacy of functional organ repair in liver and lung injury models. Investigators who performed mouse experiments and who analyzed the pattern and extent of cell distribution and tissue pathology were randomly assigned with animal or human samples. Investigators were blinded to the phenotypes of samples from different groups. For quantitative experiments consisting of n < 20 animals per group, individual level data are shown in table S1.
Genetic mouse models
The AEC2-specific Sftpc-CreERT2 mouse line was kindly provided by Dr. Brigid Hogan at Duke University, and hepatocyte-specific Albumin-Cre mouse and ROSA26-TdTomato reporter mouse expressing TdTomato after floxed stop codon were purchased from the Jackson Laboratories. Sftpc-CreERT2 and Albumin-Cre mice were bred with ROSA26-TdTomato mice, and Sftpc-CreERT2 expression in the offspring mouse was induced by 6 consecutive intraperitoneal injections of 100 mg/kg tamoxifen (Sigma-Aldrich). Expression of Cre induced excision of the stop codon preceding TdTomato and triggered expression of red fluorescent protein in AEC2s and hepatocytes. Floxed Hgf mice were obtained from mutant mouse regional resource centers (No 000423). Mice expressing EC-specific Cdh5-(PAC)-CreERT2 (84) were provided by Dr. Ralf Adams. This mouse line was crossed with floxed Hgf mice to generate HgfiΔEC/iΔEC mice and control HgfiΔEC/+ mice after treatment of tamoxifen at a dose of 150 mg/kg for 6 days, and interrupted for 3 days after the third dose. Deletion of target genes in ECs was corroborated by quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Six to ten weeks old sex and weight matched HgfiΔEC/iΔEC and HgfiΔEC/+ mice and male WT mice were used for mouse PH, PNX and liver and lung injury models. Six to ten weeks old immunodeficient NCG mice from Nanjing Biomedical Research Institute of Nanjing University were used for transplantation of human hepatocytes and AEC2s. All animal experiments were carried out by protocols approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee at Sichuan University and Weill Cornell Medicine.
Liver and lung injury models
Injections of CCl4 were used to induce liver injury as previously described (16). CCl4 was diluted in olive oil (Sigma-Aldrich) to yield a concentration of 40% (0.64 mg/ml) and intraperitoneally injected to mice at a dose of 1.6 g/kg. Mice were subjected to BDL to induce cirrhotic liver injury (16). To perform BDL, mice were anesthetized with a cocktail of ketamine (100 mg/kg) and xylazine (10 mg/kg). Ketamine and xylazine were provided by approved veterinary service at Weill Cornell Medicine. Repetitive intratracheal bleomycin or hydrochloric acid injection models were used to induce lung injury (100). At the described time points, oxygen tension in arterial blood of treated mice was measured using I-Stat (Abbott Laboratories).
Transplantation of mouse and human parenchymal cells
AEC2s and hepatocytes expressing TdTomato were isolated as described (21, 51, 80). To isolate AEC2s, the mouse lungs were removed and digested in cocktail solution containing 2 mg/ml collagenase A and 1 mg/ml Dispase (Roche Life Science) in Hanks’ Balanced Salted Solution (HBSS). 1 ml digestion solution was directly instilled via the trachea and used to perfuse via pulmonary artery to accelerate the digestion process. Perfused mouse lungs were removed from the chest cavity to endothelial cell growth medium (Sigma-Aldrich), minced, and disrupted. Lungs were then suspended in 2.5 ml/100mg digestion cocktail at 37 °C for 15 min. Digested lungs were filtered through a 40 μm nylon mesh (cell strainer) and centrifuged. Cell suspension was centrifuged via Percoll gradient. AEC2 band was harvested, and TdTomato+ AEC2s were sorted by flow cytometry. Human AEC2s were purchased from iCell Bioscience Inc.
For mouse AEC2 transplantation, 3 million isolated mouse AEC2s were infused into mouse lungs via trachea 3 days after the 3rd or 6th Bleo or Acid treatment. Mice were also treated with Mec13-Srb, Mec13-Hgf, GKT, or Mec13-Hgf + GKT after the 3rd Bleo or Acid, and 3 million of mouse AEC2s were transplanted after 5th Bleo or 6th Acid. For human AEC2 transplantation, ten million human AEC2s were labeled with GFP and transplanted into immunodeficient NCG mice after indicated treatments. Recipient mice were sacrificed ten days after transplantation to determine the incorporation of transplanted cells in the injured lungs. Blood oxygen tension was analyzed 20 days after last Bleo or Acid injury.
Hepatocytes were purified as described via a two-step perfusion and digestion procedure (51, 80). Human hepatocytes were obtained from BioreclamationIVT. For mouse hepatocyte transplantation, 2.5 million isolated mouse hepatocytes were transplanted to the injured mouse liver via intrasplenic injection (80) three days after the 3rd or 8th injection of CCl4. Intrasplenic injection was also performed as described (80). Ten million human hepatocytes were transplanted into NCG mice at day 10 after BDL injury. Recipient mice were sacrificed at day 21 after BDL to assess the extent of hepatocyte incorporation in the injured liver.
Mouse liver and lung injury models
A mouse PH model was used to induce liver regeneration (80). Left lung PNX model and measurement of alveolar regeneration (79, 98) and lung injury (15) were adapted. Animal experiment procedures are described in supplementary methods. Liver and lung fibrotic responses were determined at the indicated time after injection of Bleo, Acid, CCl4, or BDL. Collagen distribution was assessed by Sirius red staining (15). Hydroxyproline amount was quantified in the liver and lung to determine the extent of fibrosis (15, 55). To measure peroxide formation in the tissue, immunostaining and ELISA of MDA were performed using antibody against MDA (Abcam) and a lipid peroxidation assay kit (Abcam). Generation of H2O2 in cultured stellate cells and lung fibroblasts were performed as described (76).
Culture of hepatic stellate cell and lung fibroblast
For co-culture experiments with human ECs, 200 ul matrigel (BD Biosciences) was incubated in 24 well plate, and fluorescently labeled human stellate cell LX-2 or lung fibroblasts and mCherry-labeled ECs were seeded at 1 to 1 ratio on matrigel (BD biosciences). Formation of 3 dimensional vascular tubes was imaged by fluorescent microscope. Human stellate cell line LX-2 was generously provided by Dr. Scott Friedman (Mount Sinai Hospital), and mouse hepatic stellate cell was obtained from ScienceCell Research Laboratories. Human and mouse lung fibroblasts were purchased from Science Cell Inc. Human ECs were obtained from Angiocrine Bioscience. Cultured stellate and fibroblast cells were treated with 20 ng/ml recombinant TGF-β and 40 ng/ml HGF (PeproTech Inc.) and retrieved for NOX4 protein analysis by Western blot.
NOX4 inhibitor GKT137831 and EC-specific delivery of Hgf
Pseudotyped lentiviral particles containing Hgf were conjugated with Mec13.3 antibody to induce HGF expression in endothelial cell (Mec13-Hgf). Lentivirus containing Srb construct was similarly processed with Mec13.3 as a control group (Mec13-Srb). After the third Bleo, Acid injection or BDL, six to eight weeks old mice were subjected to Mec13-Hgf or Mec13-Srb every three days at a dose of 75 μg p24 capsid protein. The effect of GKT137831 was tested in lung and liver fibrosis models. GKT137831 was dissolved in an aqueous solution (0.5% carboxymethylcellulose and 0.25% Tween 20). 10 mg/kg GKT137831 was given to mice twice weekly by oral gavage (started together with Mec13-Hgf) (56, 76). The effect of combination treatment was compared with vehicle, Mec13-Hgf, or GKT137831 alone.
Immunostaining and histological analysis of mouse and human cryosections
Mouse liver and lung tissues were harvested for histological analysis (16, 80). Human sample sources are described in supplementary material. For immunofluorescent microscopy, the liver sections (10 μm) were blocked (5% donkey serum/0.3% Triton X-100) and incubated in primary antibodies: anti-VE-cadherin polyclonal antibody (pAb, 2 μg/ml, R&D Systems), anti-NOX4 (pAb, 5 μg/ml, Abcam), anti-MDA antibody (5 μg/ml, Ab6463, Abcam), and anti-desmin (pAb, 2 μg/ml, Abcam). After incubation in fluorophore-conjugated secondary antibodies (2.5 μg/ml, Jackson ImmunoResearch), sections were counterstained with DAPI (Invitrogen). For each animal, five sections were analyzed for each animal.
Image acquisition and analysis
Histology analysis and Sirius red staining of liver or lung sections were captured with Olympus BX51 microscope (Olympus America, NY). Densitometry analysis of Western blot image was performed with ImageJ software using calibrated standard curve of optical density, and fluorescent images were recorded on AxioVert LSM710 confocal microscope (Zeiss).
Statistical analysis
All data were presented as the mean ± standard error of mean (S.E.M). For statistical analysis of experiments where there are more than two treated groups, one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) was performed, followed by Tukey’s test as post hoc analysis. Comparison of statistical difference between two experimental groups was determined by two tailed t-test.
Supplementary Material
Acknowledgments
We are grateful to Dr. Scott L. Friedman (Mount Sinai Hospital, NY) for kindly providing human hepatic stellate cell LX-2. We want to thank Dr. Irvin S.Y. Chen (UCLA, CA) for offering pseudotype virus vector. We are indebted to Dr. Ralf H. Adams (Max Planck Institute, Germany) and Dr. Brigid L.M. Hogan (Duke University, NC) for EC-specific Cdh5-(PAC)-CreERT2 mice and AEC2-specific Sftpc-CreERT2 mouse line.
Funding: This work was supported by National Scientist Development Grant from the American Heart Association (12SDG1213004), National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (R01HL097797, R01HL119872, R01HL130826), National Natural Science Foundation of China (91639117), and National Key Research and Development Program focused on Stem Cell and Translational Research (2016YFA0101600). S.R. is also supported by the Empire State Stem Cell Board and New York State Department of Health grants (C024180, C026438, C026878, C028117).
Footnotes
Author Contributions: Z.C. conceived the project, performed the experiments, analyzed the results, and wrote the paper. T.Y., Y.S. G.J. designed and carried out the experiments, analyzed the data and edited the manuscript. K.S, Y.C, L.L, F.N., X.L., and Z.H. performed the experiments. J.L.K, V.M., L.Q., and C.C. analyzed the data. F.J.M commented on the study, and edited the manuscript. S.R. commented on the study. B.-S.D. designed and carried out the experiments, interpreted the results, and wrote the manuscript.
Competing interests: The authors have declared that no conflict of interest exists.
Data and materials availability: All materials are contained within manuscript and supplementary materials.
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