Pulmonary Fibrosis, Immune Responses & Guidance Proteins - The Herzog Lab at Yale School of Medicine
February 23, 2026Information
- ID
- 13868
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- DCA Citation Guide
Transcript
- 00:06We don't fully understand why
- 00:08pulmonary fibrosis
- 00:10happens.
- 00:11We think the lung has
- 00:12become injured for some reason,
- 00:15and that in an attempt
- 00:16to suppress the injury,
- 00:18the lung develops
- 00:20an ongoing healing process.
- 00:22It generates extra tissue and
- 00:25it's trying to regrow itself,
- 00:27but it can't and as
- 00:28a result you just get
- 00:30more and more scar formation
- 00:32to the point where the
- 00:33lungs become stiff, they're full
- 00:35of scar tissue and it's
- 00:37difficult for patients to take
- 00:38a deep breath and it's
- 00:39difficult for patients to live
- 00:41their daily lives. I mean,
- 00:42a cause is shorter life
- 00:44because they ultimately results in
- 00:47lung failure.
- 00:53My lab is devoted to
- 00:54finding a cure for pulmonary
- 00:56fibrosis,
- 00:57and we do this by
- 00:58studying
- 00:59immune responses
- 01:01and neuronal guidance proteins. For
- 01:03years, it was thought that
- 01:04the immune system had no
- 01:05role in pulmonary fibrosis.
- 01:07We all know that the
- 01:09immune system
- 01:10really helps us fight off
- 01:12infection, but there's a whole
- 01:13other role for the immune
- 01:15system in regulating
- 01:17how tissue responds to injury.
- 01:20Netrin one was initially discovered
- 01:22as a neuronal guidance protein.
- 01:24It was discovered that they
- 01:25also had important roles in
- 01:27immunity
- 01:28and in tissue remodeling. And
- 01:30so when we initially began
- 01:32studying netrin one and proteins
- 01:33like netrin one, we were
- 01:35studying how netrin one regulates
- 01:38immune responses
- 01:39during
- 01:40healing. Recently though,
- 01:43we made the completely
- 01:45unexpected finding that in addition
- 01:47to these immunologic functions, Netrin
- 01:49one contributes to tissue repair,
- 01:51remodeling,
- 01:52and also fibrosis
- 01:54through its originally
- 01:55described function
- 01:57of stimulating
- 01:58nerve growth and mediating where
- 02:00nerves are going
- 02:02during development and during repair.
- 02:09When you're trying to develop
- 02:10a treatment for a human
- 02:12disease, having a human relevant
- 02:14modeling system is critically important.
- 02:16I have to develop models,
- 02:18like little simulators
- 02:19of the human disease in
- 02:21the laboratory that we've engineered
- 02:23to express human genes and
- 02:25act like human fibrosis
- 02:27when we study it. Other
- 02:29times, we're studying samples that
- 02:31we get from our patients
- 02:32in the clinic, you know,
- 02:34cells or blood specimens and
- 02:36we're understanding the immune system
- 02:37through those samples.
- 02:39But other times we're making
- 02:41what we call mimetics, which
- 02:43is where we're using human
- 02:45organs that we get from
- 02:46pathology
- 02:47and create a little mini
- 02:49lung in the laboratory that
- 02:50we can use to study
- 02:51human biology.
- 02:57My
- 02:58goal
- 02:59is based on my hope
- 03:00that we will find a
- 03:02way to cure pulmonary fibrosis.
- 03:04Whether this is through prevention,
- 03:07meaning we understand why does
- 03:09pulmonary fibrosis develop and how
- 03:11can we prevent that.
- 03:13Whether it's developing
- 03:14a drug or a method
- 03:16that we can use to
- 03:17to halt the disease so
- 03:18there's no further progression
- 03:20or that we will get
- 03:21to the point where we
- 03:23advance science such that the
- 03:25next generation of scientists can
- 03:26pick up where we left
- 03:27off and we end up
- 03:29with being able to reverse
- 03:30the disease,
- 03:31eradicate fibrosis, and have normal
- 03:33lung regrow so patients who
- 03:35were previously sick can become
- 03:37healthy.