| Literature DB >> 33859562 |
Martina Gentzsch1,2,3, Deborah M Cholon1, Nancy L Quinney1, Mary E B Martino1, John T Minges1, Susan E Boyles1, Tara N Guhr Lee1, Charles R Esther1,2, Carla M P Ribeiro1,3,4.
Abstract
In cystic fibrosis (CF), defective biogenesis and activity of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) leads to airway dehydration and impaired mucociliary clearance, resulting in chronic airway infection and inflammation. The most common CFTR mutation, F508del, results in a processing defect in which the protein is retained in the endoplasmic reticulum and does not reach the apical surface. CFTR corrector compounds address this processing defect to promote mutant CFTR transfer to the apical membrane. When coupled with potentiators to increase CFTR channel activity, these drugs yield significant clinical benefits in CF patients carrying the F508del mutation. However, processing of CFTR and other proteins can be influenced by environmental factors such as inflammation, and the impact of airway inflammation on pharmacological activity of CFTR correctors is not established. The present study evaluated CFTR-rescuing therapies in inflamed CF airway epithelial cultures, utilizing models that mimic the inflammatory environment of CF airways. Primary bronchial epithelial cultures from F508del/F508del CF patients were inflamed by mucosal exposure to one of two inflammatory stimuli: 1) supernatant from mucopurulent material from CF airways with advanced lung disease, or 2) bronchoalveolar lavage fluid from pediatric CF patients. Cultures inflamed with either stimulus exhibited augmented F508del responses following therapy with correctors VX-809 or VX-661, and overcame the detrimental effects of chronic exposure to the CFTR potentiator VX-770. Remarkably, even the improved CFTR rescue responses resulting from a clinically effective triple therapy (VX-659/VX-661/VX-770) were enhanced by epithelial inflammation. Thus, the airway inflammatory milieu from late- and early-stage CF lung disease improves the efficacy of CFTR modulators, regardless of the combination therapy used. Our findings suggest that pre-clinical evaluation of CFTR corrector therapies should be performed under conditions mimicking the native inflammatory status of CF airways, and altering the inflammatory status of CF airways may change the efficacy of CFTR modulator therapies.Entities:
Keywords: CFTR; CFTR corrector; CFTR potentiator; CFTR rescue; F508del; airway inflammation
Year: 2021 PMID: 33859562 PMCID: PMC8042279 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2021.628722
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
FIGURE 1SMM and BALF enhance F508del rescue by VX-661. (A) CFTR responses from F508del/F508del HBE evaluated in Ussing chambers. Cultures were exposed apically to 30 µM SMM or BALF and treated on the basolateral side with vehicle or 5 µM VX-661, as described in Methods. Data are expressed as mean ± SEM. *p < 0.05, (t tests), ns = not significant; n = 2 donors, five to six cultures/experimental group. (B) Representative CFTR Western blot to analyze F508del maturation (upper band); n = 2 cultures due to limited amounts of BALF. (C) IL-8 secretion (pg/ml of culture media) from the F508del/F508del HBE evaluated in (A). Data are expressed as mean ± SEM. Note: Because the BALF samples were diluted, they were concentrated 4-fold with Centricon centrifugal filter units.
FIGURE 2SMM overcomes chronic VX-770 treatment-promoted inhibition of F508del rescue. F508del CFTR responses were measured in Ussing chambers. (A) SMM overcomes chronic VX-770 (5 μM, 48 h)-mediated abrogation of VX-809-promoted rescue. (B) SMM overcomes chronic VX-770 (5 μM, 48 h)-mediated abrogation of VX-661-dependent rescue. (C),(D) IL-8 secretion from F508del/F508del HBE cultures exposed to PBS or SMM and treated for 48 h with VX-809 (C) or VX-661 (D) ± VX-770. Data are expressed as mean ± SEM. *p < 0.05, ns = not significant; n = 3 CF HBE donors, three cultures/donor.
FIGURE 3SMM overcomes chronic VX-770 treatment-promoted inhibition of UTP-induced responses. F508del/F508del HBE cultures were exposed for 48 h to vehicle or 5 µM VX-809 or VX-661 ± 5 µM VX-770 in combination with PBS or SMM. Data are expressed as mean ± SEM. *p < 0.05; n = 3 F508del/F508del HBE culture donors, experiments were performed in three replicates/donor.
FIGURE 4SMM enhances triple combination-promoted F508del rescue. (A) CFTR responses to acute forskolin + VX-770 from F508del/F508del HBE in Ussing chambers. HBE were treated with VX-659 (1 µM), VX-661 (5 µM) and VX-770 (5 µM). (B) IL-8 secretion from the CF HBE cultures evaluated in A. Data are expressed as mean ± SEM. *p < 0.05; n = 2 donors, five to six cultures/experimental group.
FIGURE 5Potential mechanism for airway inflammation-increased efficacy of F508del CFTR modulators. (A) In the absence of inflammation, lower expression of chaperones and lower efficacy of CFTR correctors result in a lower level of CFTR folding at the ER. (B) CF airway epithelial inflammation increases the ER protein folding capacity, thereby enhancing CFTR modulator efficacy. (C) Our model predicts that the higher the levels of airway inflammation, the higher the efficacy of CFTR modulators regarding the rescue of F508del.