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Cathepsin D is essential for the degradomic shift of macrophages required to resolve liver fibrosis

Authors :
Paloma Ruiz-Blázquez
María Fernández-Fernández
Valeria Pistorio
Celia Martinez-Sanchez
Michele Costanzo
Paula Iruzubieta
Ekaterina Zhuravleva
Júlia Cacho-Pujol
Silvia Ariño
Alejandro Del Castillo-Cruz
Susana Núñez
Jesper B. Andersen
Margherita Ruoppolo
Javier Crespo
Carmen García-Ruiz
Luigi Michele Pavone
Thomas Reinheckel
Pau Sancho-Bru
Mar Coll
José C. Fernández-Checa
Anna Moles
Source :
Molecular Metabolism, Vol 87, Iss , Pp 101989- (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2024.

Abstract

Background and objectives: Fibrosis contributes to 45% of deaths in industrialized nations and is characterized by an abnormal accumulation of extracellular matrix (ECM). There are no specific anti-fibrotic treatments for liver fibrosis, and previous unsuccessful attempts at drug development have focused on preventing ECM deposition. Because liver fibrosis is largely acknowledged to be reversible, regulating fibrosis resolution could offer novel therapeutical options. However, little is known about the mechanisms controlling ECM remodeling during resolution. Changes in proteolytic activity are essential for ECM homeostasis and macrophages are an important source of proteases. Herein, in this study we evaluate the role of macrophage-derived cathepsin D (CtsD) during liver fibrosis. Methods: CtsD expression and associated pathways were characterized in single-cell RNA sequencing and transcriptomic datasets in human cirrhosis. Liver fibrosis progression, reversion and functional characterization were assessed in novel myeloid-CtsD and hepatocyte-CtsD knock-out mice. Results: Analysis of single-cell RNA sequencing datasets demonstrated CtsD was expressed in macrophages and hepatocytes in human cirrhosis. Liver fibrosis progression, reversion and functional characterization were assessed in novel myeloid-CtsD (CtsDΔMyel) and hepatocyte-CtsD knock-out mice. CtsD deletion in macrophages, but not in hepatocytes, resulted in enhanced liver fibrosis. Both inflammatory and matrisome proteomic signatures were enriched in fibrotic CtsDΔMyel livers. Besides, CtsDΔMyel liver macrophages displayed functional, phenotypical and secretomic changes, which resulted in a degradomic phenotypical shift, responsible for the defective proteolytic processing of collagen I in vitro and impaired collagen remodeling during fibrosis resolution in vivo. Finally, CtsD-expressing mononuclear phagocytes of cirrhotic human livers were enriched in lysosomal and ECM degradative signaling pathways. Conclusions: Our work describes for the first-time CtsD-driven lysosomal activity as a central hub for restorative macrophage function during fibrosis resolution and opens new avenues to explore their degradome landscape to inform drug development.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22128778
Volume :
87
Issue :
101989-
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Molecular Metabolism
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.4887cc29c02b483699490b149dfe04c7
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molmet.2024.101989