Abstract

BackgroundThe lung is constantly exposed to environmental challenges and must rapidly respond to external insults. Mechanisms involved in the repair of the damaged lung involve expansion of different epithelial cells to repopulate the injured cellular compartment. However, factors regulating cell proliferation following lung injury remain poorly understood. Here we studied the role of the transcriptional regulator Lmo4 during lung development, in the regulation of adult lung epithelial cell proliferation following lung damage and in the context of oncogenic transformation.MethodsTo study the role of Lmo4 in embryonic lung development, lung repair and tumorigenesis, we used conditional knock-out mice to delete Lmo4 in lung epithelial cells from the first stages of lung development. The role of Lmo4 in lung repair was evaluated using two experimental models of lung damage involving chemical and viral injury. The role of Lmo4 in lung tumorigenesis was measured using a mouse model of lung adenocarcinoma in which the oncogenic K-Ras protein has been knocked into the K-Ras locus. Overall survival difference between genotypes was tested by log rank test. Difference between means was tested using one-way ANOVA after assuring that assumptions of normality and equality of variance were satisfied.ResultsWe found that Lmo4 was not required for normal embryonic lung morphogenesis. In the adult lung, loss of Lmo4 reduced epithelial cell proliferation and delayed repair of the lung following naphthalene or flu-mediated injury, suggesting that Lmo4 participates in the regulation of epithelial cell expansion in response to cellular damage. In the context of K-RasG12D-driven lung tumor formation, Lmo4 loss did not alter overall survival but delayed initiation of lung hyperplasia in K-RasG12D mice sensitized by naphthalene injury. Finally, we evaluated the expression of LMO4 in tissue microarrays of early stage non-small cell lung cancer and observed that LMO4 is more highly expressed in lung squamous cell carcinoma compared to adenocarcinoma.ConclusionsTogether these results show that the transcriptional regulator Lmo4 participates in the regulation of lung epithelial cell proliferation in the context of injury and oncogenic transformation but that Lmo4 depletion is not sufficient to prevent lung repair or tumour formation.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12931-015-0228-0) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • The lung is constantly exposed to environmental challenges and must rapidly respond to external insults

  • At E16.5, strong Lmo4 expression is observed in the endoderm of the conducting airways while its expression is reduced in the distal branches from which the alveoli will form (Fig. 1a)

  • Loss of Lmo4 affects lung repair after H1N1-induced lung injury Given that Lmo4 is expressed in CD104-positive cells that have recently been described to participate in the regeneration of the epithelium after flu-mediated lung injury [22], we investigated whether Lmo4 was required for adult lung progenitor cell function

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Summary

Introduction

The lung is constantly exposed to environmental challenges and must rapidly respond to external insults. LMO4 modulates neuronal progenitor cell proliferation and inhibits differentiation of mammary epithelial cells, suggesting that it may participate in the regulation of progenitor cell function [2, 5]. LMO4 is highly expressed in epithelial cells, often at location of active mesenchymal-epithelial interactions, such as hair follicles, teeth, epidermis, mammary gland, kidney, and lung [6,7,8,9] suggesting that LMO4 may modulate the function of DNA-binding proteins in signaling pathways involved in mesenchymal-epithelial cross-talk. Down-regulation of LMO4 reduced proliferation of human breast cancer cells and increased differentiation of mouse mammary epithelial cells while overexpression of LMO4 in non-invasive, immortalised human cells promoted cell motility and invasion [3], suggesting that Lmo may play a role in epithelial cell proliferation and differentiation

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