| Literature DB >> 30160518 |
Sarah Orfanos1, Joseph Jude1, Brian T Deeney1, Gaoyuan Cao1, Deepa Rastogi2, Mark van Zee3,4, Ivan Pushkarsky3,4,5, Hector E Munoz3, Robert Damoiseaux4, Dino Di Carlo3,4,5, Reynold A Panettieri1.
Abstract
The asthma-obesity syndrome represents a major public health concern that disproportionately contributes to asthma severity and induces insensitivity to therapy. To date, no study has shown an intrinsic difference between human airway smooth muscle (HASM) cells derived from nonobese subjects and those derived from obese subjects. The objective of this study was to address whether there is a greater response to agonist-induced calcium mobilization, phosphorylation of myosin light chain (MLC), and greater shortening in HASM cells derived from obese subjects. HASM cells derived from nonobese and obese subjects were age and sex matched. Phosphorylation of MLC was measured after having been stimulated by carbachol. Carbachol- or histamine-induced mobilization of calcium and cell shortening were assessed in HASM cells derived from nonobese and obese donors. Agonist-induced MLC phosphorylation, mobilization of calcium, and cell shortening were greater in obese compared with non-obese-derived HASM cells. The MLC response was comparable in HASM cells derived from obese nonasthma and nonobese fatal asthma subjects. HASM cells derived from obese female subjects were more responsive to carbachol than HASM cells derived from obese male subjects. Insulin pretreatment had little effect on these responses. Our results show an increase in agonist-induced calcium mobilization associated with an increase in MLC phosphorylation and an increase in ASM cell shortening in favor of agonist-induced hyperresponsiveness in HASM cells derived from obese subjects. Our studies suggest that obesity induces a retained phenotype of hyperresponsiveness in cultured human airway smooth muscle cells.Entities:
Keywords: asthma; body mass index; obesity; remodeling; wheezing
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30160518 PMCID: PMC6295505 DOI: 10.1152/ajplung.00459.2017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol ISSN: 1040-0605 Impact factor: 5.464