| Literature DB >> 31396541 |
Brandon W Lewis1, Sonika Patial1, Yogesh Saini1.
Abstract
The primary purpose of pulmonary ventilation is to supply oxygen (O2) for sustained aerobic respiration in multicellular organisms. However, a plethora of abiotic insults and airborne pathogens present in the environment are occasionally introduced into the airspaces during inhalation, which could be detrimental to the structural integrity and functioning of the respiratory system. Multiple layers of host defense act in concert to eliminate unwanted constituents from the airspaces. In particular, the mucociliary escalator provides an effective mechanism for the continuous removal of inhaled insults including pathogens. Defects in the functioning of the mucociliary escalator compromise the mucociliary clearance (MCC) of inhaled pathogens, which favors microbial lung infection. Defective MCC is often associated with airway mucoobstruction, increased occurrence of respiratory infections, and progressive decrease in lung function in mucoobstructive lung diseases including cystic fibrosis (CF). In this disease, a mutation in the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene results in dehydration of the airway surface liquid (ASL) layer. Several mice models of Cftr mutation have been developed; however, none of these models recapitulate human CF-like mucoobstructive lung disease. As an alternative, the Scnn1b transgenic (Scnn1b-Tg+) mouse model overexpressing a transgene encoding sodium channel nonvoltage-gated 1, beta subunit (Scnn1b) in airway club cells is available. The Scnn1b-Tg+ mouse model exhibits airway surface liquid (ASL) dehydration, impaired MCC, increased mucus production, and early spontaneous pulmonary bacterial infections. High morbidity and mortality among mucoobstructive disease patients, high economic and health burden, and lack of scientific understanding of the progression of mucoobstruction warrants in-depth investigation of the cause of mucoobstruction in mucoobstructive disease models. In this review, we will summarize published literature on the Scnn1b-Tg+ mouse and analyze various unanswered questions on the initiation and progression of mucobstruction and bacterial infections.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31396541 PMCID: PMC6664684 DOI: 10.1155/2019/2180409
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol Res ISSN: 2314-7156 Impact factor: 4.818
Figure 1Diagrammatic comparisons of normal and mucoobstructive airways. (a) In normal airways, the normal functioning of epithelial ion channels maintains a healthy ASL layer. The normal functioning of the mucociliary clearance system efficiently clears aberrant ASL constituents. As a result, the epithelial layer consists of a balanced proportion of various epithelial cell types, including ciliated cells, club cells, and goblet cells. In addition, resident macrophages continue to perform their sentinel roles. (b) In mucoobstructive airways, an ion-channel defect causes ASL dehydration, which leads to mucus hyperconcentration, mucoobstruction, mucous cell metaplasia, bacterial infection, and airway inflammation.
Figure 2Ion-channel physiology in airways. (a) The hydration state of normal airways in airway surface liquid (ASL) is regulated by the concerted action of ion channels. Major ion channels responsible for regulating chloride (Cl−)/sodium (Na+) transport are the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR), calcium-activated chloride channels (CaCCs), and epithelial Na+ channels (ENaC). CFTR and CaCCs are responsible for regulating Cl− transport, while ENaC facilitates epithelial Na+ absorption. CFTR is also responsible for bicarbonate (HCO3−) transport that regulates the local pH of the airways. Balanced ionic transport maintains water contents of ASL in the physiological range. (b) In cystic fibrosis, a dysfunctional CFTR channel results in the net movement of sodium ions into the cytoplasm of airway epithelial cells. The osmotic drive due to sodium hyperabsorption dictates the net movement of ASL water into the cytoplasm of airway epithelial cells. These alterations result in the pathology of CF lung disease. (c) In mice, the chloride ion transport inhibition due to the genetic inactivation of a CFTR channel defect is compensated by relatively more prominent CaCCs. In Scnn1b-Tg+ airways, the overexpression of ENaC results in the hyperabsorption of sodium ion into the cytoplasm of airway epithelial cells, an ionic imbalance defect similar to human CF airways.
Mouse models of single ion-channel defect.
| S. No. | Model name | Strain background | Transgene/mutation | Spontaneous onset of lung disease | Airway mucus obstruction | Airway mucous cell metaplasia | Spontaneous airway bacterial infection | Chronic airway inflammation | Mortality | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| C57BL/6 | Mutation (exon 10) | No | Absent | Present only upon bacterial challenge | Absent | Neutrophilic infiltration at day 30 | Yes | (Snouwaert et al., [ |
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| MF1 | Mutation (exon 10) | No | Absent | Present only upon bacterial challenge | Absent | Absent | No | (Dorin et al., [ |
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| C57BL/6 | Mutation (exon 10) | No | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Yes | (Ratcliff et al., [ |
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| C57BL/6 × 129 | Mutation (exon 3) | No | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Yes | (O'Neal et al., [ |
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| 129/Sv | Mutation (exon 2) | No | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Yes | (Hasty et al., [ |
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| C57BL/6 | Mutation ( | No | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Yes | (Colledge et al., [ |
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| FVB | Mutation ( | No | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | No | (van Doorninck et al., [ |
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| C57BL/6 × 129 | Mutation ( | No | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Yes | (Zeiher et al., [ |
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| 129/SV | Mutation (exon 1) | No | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Yes | (Rozmahel et al., [ |
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| CD1/129 | Mutation ( | No | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Yes | (Delaney et al., [ |
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| C57BL/6 × 129 | Mutation ( | No | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | No | (Dickinson et al., [ |
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| C3H : C57 | Transgene ( | Yes | Yes | Yes | Postnatal | Yes | Yes | (Mall et al., [ |
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| C57BL/6 | Mutation ( | No | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | No | (van Heeckeren et al., [ |
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| C57BL/6 | Mutation ( | No | Absent | Absent | Absent | Absent | Yes | (van Heeckeren et al., [ |
Various genetic modifications in the Scnn1b-Tg+ mouse model.
| Genotype | Description | Macrophage infiltration | Neutrophil infiltration | Eosinophil infiltration | Lymphocyte infiltration | Mucous cell metaplasia | Airway mucus obstruction | Distal airspace enlargement | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Global deletion of | No significant difference | No significant difference | No significant difference | No significant difference | No significant difference | No significant difference | No significant difference | (Livraghi et al., [ |
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| Global deletion of | No significant difference | No significant difference | No significant difference | No significant difference | No significant difference | No significant difference | No significant difference | (Livraghi et al., [ |
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| Global deletion of | No significant difference | No significant difference | Significantly reduced at PND 10 and 5 weeks of age | No significant difference | Significantly reduced at PND 10 | No significant difference | No significant difference | (Livraghi et al., [ |
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| Global deletion of | Significantly higher at PND 10; no significant difference at other observed time-points | Significantly reduced | No significant difference | Lymphoid hyperplasia significantly increased at 8 weeks of age | Significantly reduced at PND 5-7, but not at other time-points | Significantly reduced at PND 5-7, but not at any other observed time-point | Not reported | (Livraghi-Butrico et al., [ |
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| Global deletion of | No significant difference | Significantly reduced | No significant difference | No significant difference | Significantly reduced | No significant difference | Significantly reduced | (Gehrig et al., [ |
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| Global deletion of | No significant difference | Significantly reduced | No significant difference | No significant difference | Not reported | Significantly reduced | Significantly reduced | (Fritzsching et al., [ |
| DTA+- | Partial deficiency of macrophages | No significant difference in total number of macrophage infiltration, significantly reduced in total percentage | Significantly increased | No significant difference | Increased occurrence of lymphoid aggregates in adult mice; significant infiltration in nonemaciated phenotype | Significantly reduced in emaciated phenotype | Significantly reduced in emaciated phenotype | No significant difference | (Saini et al., [ |
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| Global deletion of | No significant difference | No significant difference | Not reported | Increased lymphoid aggregates, but no significant difference in BALF lymphocytes | Not reported | Significantly reduced | No significant difference | (Livraghi-Butrico et al., [ |
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| Global deletion of | No significant difference | No significant difference | Not reported | No significant difference in incidence of lymphoid aggregates | Not reported | Significantly reduced | Not reported | (Livraghi-Butrico et al., [ |
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| Global deletion of | No significant difference | Significantly increased in neonates | No significant difference | No significant difference | Not reported | No significant difference | Not reported | (Chen et al., [ |