| Literature DB >> 28129777 |
Maria C Zarcone1, Annemarie van Schadewijk2, Evert Duistermaat3, Pieter S Hiemstra2, Ingeborg M Kooter4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Exacerbations constitute a major cause of morbidity and mortality in patients suffering from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Both bacterial infections, such as those with non-typeable Haemophilus influenzae (NTHi), and exposures to diesel engine emissions are known to contribute to exacerbations in COPD patients. However, the effect of diesel exhaust (DE) exposure on the epithelial response to microbial stimulation is incompletely understood, and possible differences in the response to DE of epithelial cells from COPD patients and controls have not been studied.Entities:
Keywords: Air pollution; Airway epithelial cells; Antimicrobial peptides; Antimicrobial response; COPD; Diesel exhaust; Integrated stress response; Non-typeable Haemophilus influenzae
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28129777 PMCID: PMC5273858 DOI: 10.1186/s12931-017-0510-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Respir Res ISSN: 1465-9921
Donor characterization
| COPD | SD | non-COPD | SD | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | 5/2 (M/F) | - | 4/1 (M/F) | - |
| AGE, years | 62.57 | 7.41 | 66.60 | 2.70 |
| BMI (%) | 24.55 | 2.13 | 26.70 | 1.09 |
| FEV1 (%predicted) | 67.46 | 22.84 | 94.82 | 24.09 |
| FEV1/FVC (%)a | 54.83 | 9.20 | 75.51 | 4.49 |
| Smoking history (never smoker/ex-/current smoker) | -/2/3b | - | 1/3/1 | - |
a p < 0.01 vs non-COPD subjects by Mann–Whitney t-test
bNo information on smoking history available for two COPD donors
Primer sequences for quantitative qPCR
| Gene | Tm (°C) | Forward Sequence / Reverse sequence | GeneBank accession no. or reference |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 63° | TCACCCAGGCTGGTTCAGA | NM_001686 |
| AGTGGCCAGGGTAGGCTGAT | |||
|
| 63° | AAGGTGGTGGTCGTACGCTGTG | NM_012423 |
| CGGGAAGGGTTGGTGTTCATCC | |||
|
| 65° | CCTTCGACGGACAGAGCTAC | [ |
| TCTCGGTGACAACACGAAAG | |||
|
| 65° | GGAGGGGACGTAAATCCCTA | [ |
| TTGGTCCCAGTAGTTCCAGC | |||
|
| 63° | AACCCTGAACAACGTAGTCTGCGA | NM_002133 |
| ATGGTCAACAGCGTGGACACAAA | |||
|
| 62° | CGAGGAGGAGGACAAGAAGG | NM_001025433 |
| CACCTTGAACGGCAAGAACT | |||
|
| 62° | GCACCTCCCAGAGCCCTCACTCTCC | NM_001195053.1 |
| GTCTACTCCAAGCCTTCCCCCTGCG | |||
|
| 62° | ATGTATGGTGAGCGAGAGGC | [ |
| GCAGTGTCCTTATCAGAAGGC | |||
|
| 62° | TGCTGAGTCCGCAGCAGGTG | [ |
| GCTGGCAGGCTCTGGGGAAG | |||
|
| 59° | CTG GAC CCC AAG GAA AAC | NM_000584 |
| TGG CAA CCC TAC AAC AGA C | |||
|
| 62° | ATCAGCCATGAGGGTCTTG | NM_004942 |
| GCAGCATTTTGTTCCAGG | |||
|
| 60° | ACGTGATGACAAGATTGACAAGC | NM_002963.3 |
| GCGAGGTAATTTGTGCCCTTT |
Fig. 1Epithelial barrier and cytotoxicity. Cells from 5 non-COPD and 7 COPD donors were exposed for 1 h to air (Air) or diesel exhaust (DE) and then incubated for 3 h with or without UV-inactivated NTHi that was added to the apical side (Air + NTHi or DE + NTHi). As controls, inserts not placed in the exposure units were also incubated for 3 h as untreated (U) or with NTHi alone (NTHi). TEER values (trans-electrical epithelial resistance) were measured and expressed as Ohm*cm2 a, while LDH release in the apical and basal compartment was quantified and expressed as % of the positive control (0.01% TRITON-X 100) b. Data are shown as boxes with median, with the whisker indicating the minimum and the maximum values detected. No significant differences were observed (two-tailed One-Way ANOVA with Bonferroni’s correction)
Fig. 2Gene expression of heme oxygenase-1 and of genes involved in the integrated stress response (ISR). ALI-PBECs from COPD and control donors were exposed for 1 h to air (Air) or DE, followed by 3 h exposure to UV-inactivated NTHi (Air + NTHi or DE + NTHi). TGFβ (20 ng/ml) is shown as positive control for the oxidative stress response a, tunicamycin (20 ng/ml, Tm) for the BiP expression b and controls with NTHi alone (NTHi). Expression was assessed of HMOX1 mRNA as marker of the oxidative stress response a, and of HSPA5 b, DDIT3/CHOP c and PPP1R15A/GADD34 d as markers of the unfolded protein response (UPR) to ER stress. Data are shown as boxes with median, with the whisker indicating the minimum and the maximum values detected. mRNA induction is expressed as fold from untreated control (indicated by a dashed line) after normalization on two reference genes. Statistical significance of differences is indicated as * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01 and *** p < 0.001 and was assessed using a two-tailed One-Way ANOVA with Bonferroni’s correction
Fig. 3Expression of CXCL8 and antimicrobial proteins. ALI-PBECs from COPD and control donors were exposed for 1 h to air (Air) or DE, followed by 3 h exposure to UV-inactivated NTHi (Air + NTHi or DE + NTHi); cultures not exposed in the exposure units but treated with NTHi alone (NTHi) are reported as positive controls. Analysis of gene expression of the neutrophil attracting chemokine CXCL8 a, the antimicrobial peptide DEFB4A b, and S100A7 c is shown. Data are shown as boxes with median, with the whisker indicating the minimum and the maximum values detected. mRNA induction is expressed as fold from the untreated control (indicated by a dashed line) after normalization on two reference genes. Statistical significance of differences is indicated as * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01 and ***p < 0.001 and was assessed using a two-tailed One-Way ANOVA with Bonferroni’s correction. When combining the non-COPD and COPD groups, a statistically significant induction of CXCL8 mRNA by DE was observed (p = 0.0064; data not shown in the figure) as well as a significant DE-mediated inhibition of the NTHi-induced S100A7 mRNA (p = 0.0155; data not shown in the figure)