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Gefitinib and fostamatinib target EGFR and SYK to attenuate silicosis: a multi-omics study with drug exploration

Authors :
Mingyao Wang
Zhe Zhang
Jiangfeng Liu
Meiyue Song
Tiantian Zhang
Yiling Chen
Huiyuan Hu
Peiran Yang
Bolun Li
Xiaomin Song
Junling Pang
Yanjiang Xing
Zhujie Cao
Wenjun Guo
Hao Yang
Jing Wang
Juntao Yang
Chen Wang
Source :
Signal transduction and targeted therapy. 7(1)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Silicosis is the most prevalent and fatal occupational disease with no effective therapeutics, and currently used drugs cannot reverse the disease progress. Worse still, there are still challenges to be addressed to fully decipher the intricated pathogenesis. Thus, specifying the essential mechanisms and targets in silicosis progression then exploring anti-silicosis pharmacuticals are desperately needed. In this work, multi-omics atlas was constructed to depict the pivotal abnormalities of silicosis and develop targeted agents. By utilizing an unbiased and time-resolved analysis of the transcriptome, proteome and phosphoproteome of a silicosis mouse model, we have verified the significant differences in transcript, protein, kinase activity and signaling pathway level during silicosis progression, in which the importance of essential biological processes such as macrophage activation, chemotaxis, immune cell recruitment and chronic inflammation were emphasized. Notably, the phosphorylation of EGFR (p-EGFR) and SYK (p-SYK) were identified as potential therapeutic targets in the progression of silicosis. To inhibit and validate these targets, we tested fostamatinib (targeting SYK) and Gefitinib (targeting EGFR), and both drugs effectively ameliorated pulmonary dysfunction and inhibited the progression of inflammation and fibrosis. Overall, our drug discovery with multi-omics approach provides novel and viable therapeutic strategies for the treatment of silicosis.

Details

ISSN :
20593635
Volume :
7
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Signal transduction and targeted therapy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0a0a3b5780292a7645b543f86efa1ab6