Literature DB >> 18849495

Deleterious role of TLR3 during hyperoxia-induced acute lung injury.

Lynne A Murray1, Darryl A Knight, Laura McAlonan, Rochelle Argentieri, Amrita Joshi, Furquan Shaheen, Mark Cunningham, Lena Alexopolou, Richard A Flavell, Robert T Sarisky, Cory M Hogaboam.   

Abstract

RATIONALE: Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) manifests clinically as a consequence of septic and/or traumatic injury in the lung. Oxygen therapy remains a major therapeutic intervention in ARDS, but this can contribute further to lung damage. Patients with ARDS are highly susceptible to viral infection and it may be due to altered Toll-like receptor (TLR) expression.
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the role of TLR3 in ARDS.
METHODS: TLR3 expression and signaling was determined in airway epithelial cells after in vitro hyperoxia challenge. Using a murine model of hyperoxia-induced lung injury, the role of TLR3 was determined using either TLR3-gene deficient mice or a specific neutralizing antibody directed to TLR3.
MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Increased TLR3 expression was observed in airway epithelial cells from patients with ARDS. Further, hyperoxic conditions alone were a major stimulus for increased TLR3 expression and activation in cultured human epithelial cells. Interestingly, TLR3(-/-) mice exhibited less acute lung injury, activation of apoptotic cascades, and extracellular matrix deposition after 5 days of 80% oxygen compared with wild-type (TLR3(+/+)) mice under the same conditions. Administration of a monoclonal anti-TLR3 antibody to TLR3(+/+) mice exposed to hyperoxic conditions likewise protected these mice from lung injury and inflammation.
CONCLUSIONS: The potential for redundancy in function as well as cross-talk between distinct TLRs may indeed contribute to whether the inflammatory cascade can be effectively disrupted once signaling has been initiated. Together, these data show that TLR3 has a major role in the development of ARDS-like pathology in the absence of a viral pathogen.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18849495     DOI: 10.1164/rccm.200807-1020OC

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Respir Crit Care Med        ISSN: 1073-449X            Impact factor:   21.405


  33 in total

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5.  Time course of inflammation, oxidative stress and tissue damage induced by hyperoxia in mouse lungs.

Authors:  Akinori C Nagato; Frank S Bezerra; Manuella Lanzetti; Alan A Lopes; Marco Aurélio S Silva; Luís Cristóvão Porto; Samuel S Valença
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Review 8.  The Basic Science and Molecular Mechanisms of Lung Injury and Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome.

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Authors:  Christopher S McAllister; Omar Lakhdari; Guillaume Pineton de Chambrun; Mélanie G Gareau; Alexis Broquet; Gin Hyug Lee; Steven Shenouda; Lars Eckmann; Martin F Kagnoff
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