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Enhanced Lyn Activity Causes Severe, Progressive Emphysema and Lung Cancer

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-03, 10:05 authored by Evelyn Tsantikos, Timothy Gottschalk, Elan L'Estrange-Stranieri, Caitlin O'Brien, April Raftery, Lakshanie Wickramasinghe, Jonathan McQualterJonathan McQualter, Gary Anderson, Margaret Hibbs
The epidemiological patterns of incident chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and lung adenocarcinoma are changing, with an increasing fraction of disease occurring in patients who are never-smokers or were not exposed to traditional risk factors. However, causative mechanism(s) are obscure. Overactivity of Src family kinases (SFKs) and myeloid cell-dependent inflammatory lung epithelial and endothelial damage are independent candidate mechanisms, but their pathogenic convergence has not been demonstrated. Here we present a novel preclinical model in which an activating mutation in Lyn, a nonreceptor SFK that is expressed in immune cells, epithelium, and endothelium-all strongly implicated in the pathogenesis of COPD-causes spontaneous inflammation, early-onset progressive emphysema, and lung adenocarcinoma. Surprisingly, even though activated macrophages, elastolytic enzymes, and proinflammatory cytokines were prominent, bone marrow chimeras formally demonstrated that myeloid cells were not disease initiators. Rather, lung disease arose from aberrant epithelial cell proliferation and differentiation, microvascular lesions within an activated endothelial microcirculation, and amplified EGFR (epidermal growth factor receptor) expression. In human bioinformatics analyses, LYN expression was increased in patients with COPD and was correlated with increased EGFR expression, a known lung oncogenic pathway, and LYN was linked to COPD. Our study shows that a singular molecular defect causes a spontaneous COPD-like immunopathology and lung adenocarcinoma. Furthermore, we identify Lyn and, by implication, its associated signaling pathways as new therapeutic targets for COPD and cancer. Moreover, our work may inform the development of molecular risk screening and intervention methods for disease susceptibility, progression, and prevention of these increasingly prevalent conditions.

History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1165/rcmb.2022-0463OC
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 15354989

Journal

American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology

Volume

69

Issue

1

Start page

99

End page

112

Total pages

14

Publisher

American Thoracic Society

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2023 American Thoracic Society

Former Identifier

2006124320

Esploro creation date

2023-08-19