| Literature DB >> 23606796 |
Abstract
Asthma is a chronic inflammatory disease of the airways, which results from the deregulated interaction of inflammatory cells and tissue forming cells. Beside the derangement of the epithelial cell layer, the most prominent tissue pathology of the asthmatic lung is the hypertrophy and hyperplasia of the airway smooth muscle cell (ASMC) bundles, which actively contributes to airway inflammation and remodeling. ASMCs of asthma patients secrete proinflammatory chemokines CXCL10, CCL11, and RANTES which attract immune cells into the airways and may thereby initiate inflammation. None of the available asthma drugs cures the disease--only symptoms are controlled. Dimethylfumarate (DMF) is used as an anti-inflammatory drug in psoriasis and showed promising results in phase III clinical studies in multiple sclerosis patients. In regard to asthma therapy, DMF has been anecdotally reported to reduce asthma symptoms in patients with psoriasis and asthma. Here we discuss the potential use of DMF as a novel therapy in asthma on the basis of in vitro studies of its inhibitory effect on ASMC proliferation and cytokine secretion in ASMCs.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23606796 PMCID: PMC3625606 DOI: 10.1155/2013/875403
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mediators Inflamm ISSN: 0962-9351 Impact factor: 4.711
Figure 1Histological tissue sections of two patients with moderate asthma and two nonasthma controls. Arrows indicate the loss of epithelium integrity, the increase of the basement membrane thickness, and the increased number of ASM bundles in the asthmatic airways (c, d), compared to nonasthmatic airways (a, b).
Figure 2Chemical structure of dimethylfumarate.
DMF effects on primary human lung cells.
| Factors | DMF effect | After stimulation | Cell type | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CXCL10 | Inhibition at 10–100 | TNF- | ASMC | [ |
| G-CSF | No effect | IFN- | ASMC | [ |
| Eotaxin | Inhibition at 10–100 | TNF- | ASMC | [ |
| RANTES | Inhibition at 10–100 | TNF- | ASMC | [ |
| IL-8 | No effect at 0.01–1 | Rhinovirus | Lung fibroblasts | [ |
| GM-CSF | Inhibition at 100 | TNF- | ASMC | [ |
| IL-6 | Inhibition at 10–100 | TNF- | ASMC and lung fibroblasts | [ |
| No effect at 0.01–1 | Rhinovirus | Lung fibroblasts | [ | |
| Cell proliferation | Inhibition at 10–100 | PDGF-BB | ASMC and lung fibroblasts | [ |
Figure 3Secretion of chemokines such as CXCL10, CCL11, or RANTES by ASMC attracts immune cells (eosinophils, T cells, or mast cells) into the asthmatic airway. In turn, these immune cells secrete proinflammatory cytokines (TNF-α, IFN-γ, etc.), which stimulate proinflammatory signaling molecules such as NF-κB or MSK-1 in ASMC, enhancing its proinflammatory function. DMF reduces intracellular reduced glutathione (GSH) level and thereby induces HO-1 expression and IκB-glutathionylation. DMF-induced HO-1 decreased CXCL10 and ASMC proliferation by an unknown mechanism. IκB-glutathionylation inhibited IκB degradation and subsequent NF-κB nuclear entry. Furthermore, DMF inhibited MSK-1-mediated histone H3 and NF-κB phosphorylation, leading to reduced secretion of CXCL10, CCL11, and RANTES. DMF reduces ASMC chemokine secretion and may therefore inhibit the crosstalk between ASMC and immune cells, leading to airway inflammation.