| Literature DB >> 28814293 |
Brittany Salter1, Cara Pray1, Katherine Radford1, James G Martin2, Parameswaran Nair3.
Abstract
Airway remodelling is an important feature of asthma pathogenesis. A key structural change inherent in airway remodelling is increased airway smooth muscle mass. There is emerging evidence to suggest that the migration of airway smooth muscle cells may contribute to cellular hyperplasia, and thus increased airway smooth muscle mass. The precise source of these cells remains unknown. Increased airway smooth muscle mass may be collectively due to airway infiltration of myofibroblasts, neighbouring airway smooth muscle cells in the bundle, or circulating hemopoietic progenitor cells. However, the relative contribution of each cell type is not well understood. In addition, although many studies have identified pro and anti-migratory agents of airway smooth muscle cells, whether these agents can impact airway remodelling in the context of human asthma, remains to be elucidated. As such, further research is required to determine the exact mechanism behind airway smooth muscle cell migration within the airways, how much this contributes to airway smooth muscle mass in asthma, and whether attenuating this migration may provide a therapeutic avenue for asthma. In this review article, we will discuss the current evidence with respect to the regulation of airway smooth muscle cell migration in asthma.Entities:
Keywords: Airway smooth muscle; Asthma; Cytokines; Migration; Remodelling
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28814293 PMCID: PMC5559796 DOI: 10.1186/s12931-017-0640-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Respir Res ISSN: 1465-9921
Fig. 1a: The process of ASMC migration can be divided into 5 steps: cell polarization, protrustion, adhesion, contraction, and retraction. These steps are controlled by specific signaling proteins, which are modulated by external stimuli. The signaling proteins are described in Fig. 1A. b: Cell migration is initiated by activation of receptors such as G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), receptor tyrosine kinases (RTK), and integrins, which trigger downstream intracellular signaling, resulting in airway smooth muscle cell (ASMC) migration. An important contributing factor to ASMC migration is actin polymerization, which is a proximal event that propels the leading cell edge towards external stimuli. Various mediators and the extracellular matrix (ECM), for example PDGF, HB-EGF, TGF-β, can activate these membrane receptors. Post-receptor activation, there is downstream induction of trimeric G proteins, Src tyrsoine kinases, phospholipase C, PIP2, c-Abl, and PI3K. This is followed by subsequent activation of signaling proteins (Cdc42, Ras, Rac, Rho, Cortactin, FAK, Akt, PKA, etc), which regulate cell polarization, actin polymerization and traction force. There are various downstream targets that are integral to these processes including the effector proteins mDIA1, WAVE, WASP, ARP2/3 complex. Additional downstream regulators include members of the MAPK family p38 MAPK, ERK, Rho kinase (ROCK), and p21-activated protein kinases (PAK). This results in further phosphorylation of other protein kinases including MAPKAPK, LIMK or phosphatases like MLCP, which then regulate effector proteins that control actin polymerization (HSP20, HSP27, Cortactin, Pin-1, Cofilin) and traction forces (myosin II). Actin polymerization is controlled via complex processes that involve actin branching, actin elongation, and de-branching. This figure is a simplified illustration of the various signaling pathways, which is in reality far more complex then this. These processes are thoroughly reviewed by Tang [127] and Gerthoffer et al. [128]. Red arrows indicate inhibition, green arrows indicate stimulation. Purple circles indicate the most upstream signaling proteins, lightest blue circles indicate effector proteins, including small G proteins, and darker blue circles represent proteins that directly regulate ASMC migration
Fig. 2Airway remodeling is an important feature of asthma pathogenesis. An important contribution to airway remodeling is increased ASM mass, which is thought to be brought on by ASMC migration, thereby adding to the local cellular hyperplasia. The source of these ASMCs has been thought to be due to local infiltration of myfibroblasts, neighbouring ASMCs, and circulating HPCs. Various mediators have been identified that influence ASMC migration, which are outlined in this figure. Local pro-inflammatory mediators produced by airway epithelial cells, including TGF-β, PDGF, EGF, PGD2, CXCL2, CXCL3, IL-8, eotaxin, TSLP, and CCL19 have been shown to induce ASMC migration, whereas PGE2 and Lipoxin A2 inhibit ASMC migration. In addition, inflammatory cytokines produced by Th17 and Th2 cells, as well as CysLTs produced by basophils and mast cells, further contribute to ASMC migration. Conversely, systemically circulating leptin inhibits ASMC migration. Abbreviations: EP- epithelium; LP- lamina propria; ASM- Airway Smooth Muscle; ASMCs- Airway Smooth Muscle Cells; HPCs- hemopoetic progenitor cells; CysLTs- cysteinyl leukotrienes
Promoters and Inhibitors of ASMC Migration
| Promoters | Inhibitors |
|---|---|
| PDGF [ | Lipoxin A2 [ |
| TGF-β [ | PGE2 [ |
| HB-EGF [ | Corticosteroids [ |
| PGD2 [ | Beta-Agonists [ |
| LTB4 [ | CysLT Receptor Antagonists [ |
| Eotaxin [ | Leptin [ |
| IL-8 [52] | Retinoic Acid [ |
| CXCL2 [ | PPAR Agonists [ |
| CXCL3 [ | Src Inhibitors [ |
| IL-13 [56] | PI3K Inhibitors [ |
| TNF-α [ | P38 Inhibitors [ |
| Th-17 [58] | MAPK Inhibitors [ |
| Urokinase [ | PTEN Agonists [ |
| uPAR [ | Inverse Agonism of S1P1 [ |
| HRV-16 [84–87] | c-Abl Inhibitors [ |
| LTE4 [ | |
| CCL19 [ | |
| TSLP [ |
Potential Pharmacological Therapies to Reduce ASMC Migration
| Therapies | Summary of findings |
|---|---|
| Corticosteroids [ | • Fluticasone and Dexamethasone shown to inhibit PDGF-stimulated ASMC migration in vitro [ |
| Beta-Agonist [ | • Inhibition of PDGF-stimulated ASMC migration in vitro [ |
| Adenylyl Cyclase Analogue [ | • Inhibition of PDF-induced ASMC migration in vitro [ |
| PDE4 Inhibitor [ | • Inhibition of non-PDGF stimulated ASMC migration in vitro [ |
| CysLT Receptor Antagonist [ | • Priming effect of LTE4 on PDGF-induced ASMC migration was inhibited following treatment with Montelukast in vitro [ |
| DP2/CRTH2 Receptor Antagonist [ | • Inhibition of PGD2-stimulated ASMC migration in vitro [ |
| PPAR Agonist [ | • Inhibition of PDF-induced ASMC migration in vitro [ |