| Literature DB >> 32294408 |
Alexander Perniss1, Shuya Liu2, Brett Boonen3, Maryam Keshavarz1, Anna-Lena Ruppert4, Thomas Timm5, Uwe Pfeil1, Aichurek Soultanova1, Soumya Kusumakshi6, Lucas Delventhal1, Öznur Aydin1, Martina Pyrski3, Klaus Deckmann1, Torsten Hain7, Nadine Schmidt8, Christa Ewers8, Andreas Günther9, Günter Lochnit5, Vladimir Chubanov10, Thomas Gudermann10, Johannes Oberwinkler11, Jochen Klein12, Katsuhiko Mikoshiba13, Trese Leinders-Zufall3, Stefan Offermanns14, Burkhard Schütz4, Ulrich Boehm6, Frank Zufall3, Bernd Bufe15, Wolfgang Kummer16.
Abstract
Mucociliary clearance through coordinated ciliary beating is a major innate defense removing pathogens from the lower airways, but the pathogen sensing and downstream signaling mechanisms remain unclear. We identified virulence-associated formylated bacterial peptides that potently stimulated ciliary-driven transport in the mouse trachea. This innate response was independent of formyl peptide and taste receptors but depended on key taste transduction genes. Tracheal cholinergic chemosensory cells expressed these genes, and genetic ablation of these cells abrogated peptide-driven stimulation of mucociliary clearance. Trpm5-deficient mice were more susceptible to infection with a natural pathogen, and formylated bacterial peptides were detected in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Optogenetics and peptide stimulation revealed that ciliary beating was driven by paracrine cholinergic signaling from chemosensory to ciliated cells operating through muscarinic M3 receptors independently of nerves. We provide a cellular and molecular framework that defines how tracheal chemosensory cells integrate chemosensation with innate defense.Entities:
Keywords: acetylcholine; bitter receptors; brush cells; chemosensory cells; formyl peptide receptors; formylated bacterial peptides; mucociliary clearance; taste transduction; trachea; transient receptor potential cation channel subfamily M member 5; tuft cells
Year: 2020 PMID: 32294408 DOI: 10.1016/j.immuni.2020.03.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Immunity ISSN: 1074-7613 Impact factor: 31.745