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Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is a progressive and incurable lung disease characterized by tissue scarring that disrupts gas exchange. Epithelial cell dysfunction, fibroblast activation, and excessive extracellular matrix deposition drive this pathology that ultimately leads to respiratory failure. Mechanistic studies have shown that repeated injury to alveolar epithelial cells initiates an aberrant wound-healing response by surrounding fibroblasts through secretion of mediators like transforming growth factor beta (TGF- β), yet the precise biological pathways contributing to disease progression are not fully understood. To better study these interactions there is a critical need for lung models that replicate the cellular heterogeneity, geometry, and biomechanics of the distal lung microenvironment. In this study, induced pluripotent stem cell-derived alveolar epithelial type II (iATII) cells and human pulmonary fibroblasts were arranged to replicate key features of human lung micro-architecture and embedded in soft or stiff poly(ethylene glycol) norbornene (PEG-NB) hydrogels that recapitulated the mechanical properties of healthy and fibrotic lung tissue, respectively. The co-cultured cells were then exposed to pro-fibrotic cytokines and growth factors. iATIIs and fibroblasts exhibited differentiation pathways and gene expression patterns consistent with trends observed during IPF progression in vivo. A design of experiments statistical analysis identified stiff hydrogels combined with pro-fibrotic biochemical cue exposure as the most effective condition tested in this study for modeling fibrosis in vitro. Finally, treatment with Nintedanib, one of only two Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved drugs for IPF, was assessed. Treatment reduced fibroblast activation, as indicated by downregulation of key activation genes, and upregulated several epithelial genes involved in alveolar repair. These findings demonstrate that human 3D co-culture models hold are a promising tool for advancing our understanding of IPF and identifying new therapeutic targets. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: This study leverages advanced biomaterials and biofabrication techniques to engineer physiologically relevant, donor-specific, and sex-matched models of pulmonary fibrosis, addressing the critical need for pre-clinical therapeutic drug screening platforms. These human 3D lung models successfully replicated key features of fibrotic lung tissue. Tuning microenvironmental stiffness of 3D PEG-NB hydrogels to match fibrotic lung values and exposing human iATII cells and fibroblasts to pro-fibrotic biochemical cues recreated hallmark characteristics of in vivo fibrosis pathogenesis, including epithelial differentiation and loss, as well as fibroblast activation. The utility of these models was further validated by demonstrating responsiveness to Nintedanib, a clinically available treatment for IPF. These findings highlight the transformative potential of well-defined biomaterial-based 3D models for elucidating complex disease mechanisms and accelerating therapeutic drug discovery for chronic pulmonary diseases like idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.actbio.2025.08.010 | DOI Listing |
Lung
September 2025
Department of Anesthesiology, Union Hospital, Tongji Medical College, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan, 430022, China.
Introduction: Lactate has emerged as a multifunctional signaling molecule regulating various physiological and pathological processes. Furthermore, lactylation, a newly identified posttranslational modification triggered by lactate accumulation, plays significant roles in human health and diseases. This study aims to investigate the roles of lactate/lactylation in respiratory diseases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomed Environ Sci
August 2025
School of public health, Hebei Key Laboratory for Organ Fibrosis Research, North China University of Science and Technology, Tangshan 063210, Hebei China.
Research (Wash D C)
September 2025
NHC Key Laboratory of Tropical Disease Control, School of Life Sciences and Medical Technology, Hainan Medical University, Haikou, Hainan 571199, China.
Aging is characterized by a gradual decline in the functionality of all the organs and tissues, leading to various diseases. As the global population ages, the urgency to develop effective anti-aging strategies becomes increasingly critical due to the growing severity of associated health problems. Immunotherapy offers novel and promising approaches to combat aging by utilizing approaches including vaccines, antibodies, and cytokines to target specific aging-related molecules and pathways.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMed Int (Lond)
August 2025
Hunan Provincial Hospital of Integrated Traditional Chinese and Western Medicine (The Affiliated Hospital of Hunan Academy of Traditional Chinese Medicine), Changsha, Hunan 410060, P.R. China.
S-glutathionylation (SSG), a redox-sensitive post-translational modification mediated by glutathione, regulates protein structure and function through reversible disulfide bond formation at cysteine residues. Glutaredoxins (GRXs), pivotal antioxidant enzymes, catalyze SSG dynamics to maintain thiol homeostasis. Recent advances in redox proteomics have revealed that SSG dysregulation is intricately linked to neurodegenerative, cardiovascular, pulmonary and malignant diseases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAllergy
September 2025
Department of Musculoskeletal and Dermatological Sciences, Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health, Lydia Becker Institute of Immunology and Inflammation, The University of Manchester, Manchester, UK.
Mast cells (MCs) rapidly adapt to the microenvironment due to the plethora of cytokine receptors expressed. Understanding microenvironment-primed immune responses is essential to elucidate the phenotypic/functional changes MCs undergo, and thus understand their contribution to diseases and predict the most effective therapeutic strategies. We exposed primary human MCs to cytokines mimicking a T1/pro-inflammatory (IFNγ), T2/allergic (IL-4 + IL-13), alarmin-rich (IL-33) and pro-fibrotic/pro-tolerogenic (TGFβ) microenvironment.
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