Description
Acute and chronic lung diseases are leading causes of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Substantial scientific gaps exist in understanding mechanisms of lung disease pathogenesis, and in managing and treating pulmonary conditions, including asthma, COPD, IPF, pulmonary hypertension, acute lung injury, and sleep apnea. This workshop was designed to assess a new generation of circadian genomic findings, and identify opportunities to apply these discoveries to advance our understanding of lung disease pathophysiology and ability to diagnose and treat lung diseases.
The circadian clock is a highly conserved genomic system present in the brain and virtually every peripheral tissue, responsible for producing 24-hour rhythms in gene expression and coordinating the temporal organization of molecular pathways, cells, and tissues. Over the past decade, a new generation of discoveries has uncovered a mechanistic interface between the circadian clock and fundamental cellular processes including oxidative stress, cell metabolism, immune and inflammatory responses, epigenetic modification, hypoxia/hyperoxia response pathways, endoplasmic reticular stress, autophagy, and regulation of the stem cell environment. While each of these processes has been implicated in lung pathophysiology, the lung transcriptome exhibits robust circadian oscillations, and lung diseases such as asthma and COPD exhibit time-of-day specific exacerbations, the significance of circadian regulation in the pathogenesis and management of lung disease is not well-understood.
The charge to the working group was to discuss and identify research opportunities related to (1) elucidating mechanisms of lung disease, injury, and susceptibility closely-coupled to circadian clock regulation (2) evaluating current directions in lung disease research and strategies to determine whether impaired circadian rhythm exacerbates or ameliorates disease, (3) determining the relationship of circadian mechanisms to the repair and restoration of damaged lung tissues, (4) identifying opportunities to leverage advances in circadian biology to improve the diagnosis, management, and treatment of lung diseases.