| Literature DB >> 26658828 |
Nami Shrestha Palikhe1, Drew Nahirney1, Cheryl Laratta1, Vivek Dipak Gandhi1, Dilini Vethanayagam1, Mohit Bhutani1,2, Irvin Mayers1, Lisa Cameron1,3, Harissios Vliagoftis1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Protease-Activated Receptor-2 (PAR-2), a G protein coupled receptor activated by serine proteases, is widely expressed in humans and is involved in inflammation. PAR-2 activation in the airways plays an important role in the development of allergic airway inflammation. PAR-2 expression is known to be upregulated in the epithelium of asthmatic subjects, but its expression on immune and inflammatory cells in patients with asthma has not been studied.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26658828 PMCID: PMC4682828 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0144500
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Demographic and clinical characteristic of study subjects.
| Clinical demographics | Mild/Moderate asthma (n = 24) | Severe asthma (n = 12) |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Mean Age (Min-Max) (y) | 39.3±2.8 (22–68) | 43.0±4.2 (28–67) | 0.512 |
| No of female patients (%) | 14 (58.3%) | 5 (41.7%) | 0.483 |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 33.7±4.0 | 32.8±5.9 | 0.788 |
| Atopy (%) | 18 (90%) | 8 (72.7%) | 0.317 |
| Log transformed IgE (kU/L) | 1.9±0.1 | 2.0±0.2 | 0.615 |
| Eos (cells/μl) | 326.1±53.4 | 200.0±42.6 | 0.138 |
| FEV1 (% predicted) | 85.8±2.5 | 68.0±5.6 |
|
| FEV1/FVC (%) | 72.1±2.2 | 57.6±3.5 |
|
| FEV1<80% predicted | 9 (37.5%) | 9 (75%) | 0.075 |
| History of Smoking (%) | 9 (37.5%) | 5 (41.7%) | 1.000 |
| Mean Pack Years | 2.8±1.0 | 6.3±3.0 | 0.639 |
| Current Smoking (%) | 3 (12.5%) | 0 (0%) | 0.536 |
| Daily 2nd line controller | 15 (62.5%) | 12 (100%) |
|
| Total ICS dose (fluticasone equivalent—μg/day) | 410.5±71.4 | 1134.0±51.4 |
|
Because of missing data points, “n” for the categories labeled *, ** and *** is not the total of the population, but the numbers shown below:
* n = 20 for mild/moderate and n = 11 for severe asthma;
** n = 17 for mild/moderate and n = 10 for severe asthma;
*** n = 23 for mild/moderate and n = 12 for severe asthma
Fig 1PAR-2 expression on monocytes and severe asthma
A. Gating strategy to study PAR-2 expression on peripheral blood monocytes. B-C. Percentage of CD14++CD16+ (B) and CD14++CD16- (C) monocytes in the peripheral blood of severe asthmatics compared to mild/moderate asthmatics. D-E. PAR-2 expression on CD14++CD16+ (D) and CD14++CD16- (E) monocytes in patients with mild/moderate and severe asthma. F-G. Percentage of CD14++CD16+PAR-2+ (F) and CD14++CD16-PAR-2+ (G) monocytes in peripheral blood of patients with mild/moderate and severe asthma. H-I. PAR-2 MFI on CD14++CD16+ (H) and CD14++CD16- (I) monocytes from patients with mild/moderate and severe asthma. Data is presented as boxplots (n = 24 for mild/moderate and n = 12 for severe asthma). Statistical significance was assessed by Mann-Whitney rank sum test, with P<0.05 considered significant.
Fig 2ROC curve of “% of CD14++CD16+PAR-2+ monocytes” in peripheral blood used to identify patients with severe asthma.
Sensitivity and specificity were calculated according to the optimal cutoffs using R software and AUC with a 95% confidence interval is shown.
Fig 3PAR-2 mRNA expression in whole blood of patients with asthma.
(A) PAR-2 mRNA expression in mild/moderate (n = 16) and severe (n = 6) asthmatics. (B) correlation of PAR-2 mRNA expression with percentage of monocytes in peripheral blood. (C) total ICS dose and (D) percentage of FEV1 predicted in the whole population (n = 22).
Fig 4Asthma exacerbations and CD14++CD16+PAR-2+ expression.
(A) Proportion of CD14++CD16+PAR-2+ cells in peripheral blood was correlated with the total daily dose of ICS in the whole population. (B) Percentage of CD14++CD16+PAR-2+ monocytes in peripheral blood in asthmatics that did not have recent exacerbations (NAE) (n = 26) compared to asthmatics with recent exacerbations (AE) (n = 10). Correlation of the “% of CD14++CD16+PAR-2+ monocytes in peripheral blood” (C) percentage predicted FEV1 and (D) “% of CRTh2+CD4+” in peripheral blood in subjects with asthma exacerbations (n = 10).