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Sanglifehrin A mitigates multiorgan fibrosis by targeting the collagen chaperone cyclophilin B
Hope A. Flaxman, Maria-Anna Chrysovergi, Hongwei Han, Farah Kabir, Rachael T. Lister, Chia-Fu Chang, Robert Yvon, Katharine E. Black, Andreas Weigert, Rajkumar Savai, Alejandro Egea-Zorrilla, Ana Pardo-Saganta, David Lagares, Christina M. Woo
Hope A. Flaxman, Maria-Anna Chrysovergi, Hongwei Han, Farah Kabir, Rachael T. Lister, Chia-Fu Chang, Robert Yvon, Katharine E. Black, Andreas Weigert, Rajkumar Savai, Alejandro Egea-Zorrilla, Ana Pardo-Saganta, David Lagares, Christina M. Woo
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Research Article Inflammation Therapeutics

Sanglifehrin A mitigates multiorgan fibrosis by targeting the collagen chaperone cyclophilin B

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Abstract

Pathological deposition and crosslinking of collagen type I by activated myofibroblasts drives progressive tissue fibrosis. Therapies that inhibit collagen synthesis have potential as antifibrotic agents. We identify the collagen chaperone cyclophilin B as a major cellular target of the natural product sanglifehrin A (SfA) using photoaffinity labeling and chemical proteomics. Mechanistically, SfA inhibits and induces the secretion of cyclophilin B from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and prevents TGF-β1–activated myofibroblasts from synthesizing and secreting collagen type I in vitro, without inducing ER stress or affecting collagen type I mRNA transcription, myofibroblast migration, contractility, or TGF-β1 signaling. In vivo, SfA induced cyclophilin B secretion in preclinical models of fibrosis, thereby inhibiting collagen synthesis from fibrotic fibroblasts and mitigating the development of lung and skin fibrosis in mice. Ex vivo, SfA induces cyclophilin B secretion and inhibits collagen type I secretion from fibrotic human lung fibroblasts and samples from patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF). Taken together, we provide chemical, molecular, functional, and translational evidence for demonstrating direct antifibrotic activities of SfA in preclinical and human ex vivo fibrotic models. Our results identify the cellular target of SfA, the collagen chaperone cyclophilin B, as a mechanistic target for the treatment of organ fibrosis.

Authors

Hope A. Flaxman, Maria-Anna Chrysovergi, Hongwei Han, Farah Kabir, Rachael T. Lister, Chia-Fu Chang, Robert Yvon, Katharine E. Black, Andreas Weigert, Rajkumar Savai, Alejandro Egea-Zorrilla, Ana Pardo-Saganta, David Lagares, Christina M. Woo

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Figure 1

Development of pSfA probes for target identification from live cells.

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Development of pSfA probes for target identification from live cells.
(A...
(A) Structures of SfA, pSfA1, and pSfA2. (B) Summary of significantly enriched (fold change > 1, P < 0.05) proteins identified by proteomics following treatment with 10 μM pSfA1 or pSfA2, with and without competition with 10× SfA (100 μM), or the minimalist tag alone (10 μM), in Jurkat or K562 cells treated for 30 minutes prior to photoaffinity labeling (n = 3). *n = 2, due to loss of 1 sample in the comparison of pSfA1/competition. Inset: Example volcano plot showing significant and competitive enrichment of PPIB by pSfA2. (C) Western blot and relative quantification for PPIA and PPIB after enrichment of pSfA1- or pSfA2-labeled proteins from Jurkat or K562 cells. (D) In vitro labeling of recombinant GST-PPIA and GST-PPIB with pSfA probes visualized by attachment of Alexa Fluor 488 azide and in-gel fluorescence.

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