MethodsUUO. Smad3-null (Smad3 ex8/ex8 ) mice were generated as described (13) and were used at 6-8 weeks of age and 20-30 g in body weight. In mice sedated by general anes-
Although it has been well established that TGF-β plays a pivotal role in immune regulation, the roles of its downstream transcription factors, Smad2 and Smad3, have not been fully clarified. Specifically, the function of Smad2 in the immune system has not been investigated because of the embryonic lethality of Smad2-deficient mice. In this study, we generated T cell-specific Smad2 conditional knockout (KO) mice and unexpectedly found that Smad2 and Smad3 were redundantly essential for TGF-β–mediated induction of Foxp3-expressing regulatory T cells and suppression of IFN-γ production in CD4+ T cells. Consistent with these observations, Smad2/Smad3-double KO mice, but not single KO mice, developed fatal inflammatory diseases with higher IFN-γ production and reduced Foxp3 expression in CD4+ T cells at the periphery. Although it has been suggested that Foxp3 induction might underlie TGF-β–mediated immunosuppression, TGF-β still can suppress Th1 cell development in Foxp3-deficient T cells, suggesting that the Smad2/3 pathway inhibits Th1 cell development with Foxp3-independent mechanisms. We also found that Th17 cell development was reduced in Smad-deficient CD4+ T cells because of higher production of Th17-inhibotory cytokines from these T cells. However, TGF-β–mediated induction of RORγt, a master regulator of Th17 cell, was independent of both Smad2 and Smad3, suggesting that TGF-β regulates Th17 development through Smad2/3-dependent and -independent mechanisms.
Lens epithelial cells undergo epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) after injury as in cataract extraction, leading to fibrosis of the lens capsule. Fibrosis of the anterior capsule can be modeled in the mouse by capsular injury in the lens, which results in EMT of the lens epithelium and subsequent deposition of extracellular matrix without contamination of other cell types from outside the lens. We have previously shown that signaling via Smad3, a key signal-transducing element downstream of transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta and activin receptors, is activated in lens epithelial cells by 12 hours after injury and that this Smad3 activation is blocked by administration of a TGF-beta 2-neutralizing antibody in mice. We now show that EMT of primary lens epithelial cells in vitro depends on TGF-beta expression and that injury-induced EMT in vivo depends, more specifically, on signaling via Smad3. Loss of Smad3 in mice blocks both morphological changes of lens epithelium to a mesenchymal phenotype and expression of the EMT markers snail, alpha-smooth muscle actin, lumican, and type I collagen in response to injury in vivo or to exposure to exogenous TGF-beta in organ culture. The results suggest that blocking the Smad3 pathway might be beneficial in inhibiting capsular fibrosis after injury and/or surgery.
Lumican regulates collagenous matrix assembly as a keratan sulfate proteoglycan in the cornea and is also present in the connective tissues of other organs and embryonic corneal stroma as a glycoprotein. In normal unwounded cornea, lumican is expressed by stromal keratocytes. Our data show that injured mouse corneal epithelium ectopically and transiently expresses lumican during the early phase of wound healing, suggesting a potential lumican functionality unrelated to regulation of collagen fibrillogenesis, e.g. modulation of epithelial cell adhesion or migration. An anti-lumican antibody was found to retard corneal epithelial wound healing in cultured mouse eyes. Healing of a corneal epithelial injury in Lum ؊/؊ mice was significantly delayed compared with Lum ؉/؊ mice. These observations indicate that lumican expressed in injured epithelium may modulate cell behavior such as adhesion or migration, thus contributing to corneal epithelial wound healing.Rapid re-epithelialization is essential for restoration of homeostasis in injured tissues; impaired healing of injured epithelium increases the risks of infection and further damage underlying tissues (1, 2). The cornea provides an ideal model to evaluate interactions of migrating epithelial cells and the extracellular matrix of the underlying basement membrane during wound healing because epithelial injuries of the avascular corneal tissue heal in a bloodless wound field. Various specific proteins such as vinculin (3), keratins (4), CD44 hyaluronan receptors (5), and gelatinases and metalloproteinase inhibitors (6, 7) are up-regulated during corneal epithelial wound healing. These proteins are believed to modulate cell adhesion or migration.Lumican belongs to the family of small leucine-rich proteoglycans (SLRPs) 1 that includes keratocan, mimecan, decorin, biglycan, fibromodulin, epiphycan, and osteoadherin. In the cornea, lumican, keratocan, and mimecan are modified with keratan sulfate glycosaminoglycan chains comprising the keratan sulfate proteoglycans (KSPG) of the stromal extracellular matrix (8 -13). In normal unwounded mouse cornea, lumican mRNA is expressed in stromal keratocytes (14). Lumican KSPG is a key regulator of collagen fibrillogenesis, a process critical to corneal transparency. Mice lacking lumican show an age-dependent corneal opacity and a high proportion of abnormally thick collagen fibers in the corneal stroma (15).Lumican is also widely present as a non-or low-sulfated glycoprotein in connective tissues of many other organ systems, e.g. skeleton, heart, kidney, and lung (14, 16 -18). During mouse embryonic ocular development, lumican is synthesized by keratocytes; detected as a glycoprotein, not as a KSPG (19); and also transiently expressed by the corneal epithelium, neural retina, and epidermis (14). These observations suggest that epithelial tissues possess the capacity to express lumican under certain conditions. Several studies have demonstrated that SLRP proteins can modulate cellular behaviors, i.e. cell migration and prolifera...
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