Literature DB >> 34031698

Repetitive diacetyl vapor exposure promotes ubiquitin proteasome stress and precedes bronchiolitis obliterans pathology.

Juan Wang1, So-Young Kim2, Emma House2,3, Heather M Olson1, Carl J Johnston2,4, David Chalupa4, Eric Hernady4, Thomas J Mariani5, Gérémy Clair1, Charles Ansong1, Wei-Jun Qian1, Jacob N Finkelstein4,5, Matthew D McGraw6,7.   

Abstract

Bronchiolitis obliterans (BO) is a devastating lung disease seen commonly after lung transplant, following severe respiratory tract infection or chemical inhalation exposure. Diacetyl (DA; 2,3-butanedione) is a highly reactive alpha-diketone known to cause BO when inhaled, however, the mechanisms of how inhalation exposure leads to BO development remains poorly understood. In the current work, we combined two clinically relevant models for studying the pathogenesis of DA-induced BO: (1) an in vivo rat model of repetitive DA vapor exposures with recovery and (2) an in vitro model of primary human airway epithelial cells exposed to pure DA vapors. Rats exposed to 5 consecutive days 200 parts-per-million DA 6 h per day had worsening survival, persistent hypoxemia, poor weight gain, and histologic evidence of BO 14 days after DA exposure cessation. At the end of exposure, increased expression of the ubiquitin stress protein ubiquitin-C accumulated within DA-exposed rat lung homogenates and localized primarily to the airway epithelium, the primary site of BO development. Lung proteasome activity increased concurrently with ubiquitin-C expression after DA exposure, supportive of significant proteasome stress. In primary human airway cultures, global proteomics identified 519 significantly modified proteins in DA-exposed samples relative to controls with common pathways of the ubiquitin proteasome system, endosomal reticulum transport, and response to unfolded protein pathways being upregulated and cell-cell adhesion and oxidation-reduction pathways being downregulated. Collectively, these two models suggest that diacetyl inhalation exposure causes abundant protein damage and subsequent ubiquitin proteasome stress prior to the development of chemical-induced BO pathology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Airway epithelium; Bronchiolitis obliterans; Chemical inhalation; Diacetyl; Ubiquitin proteasome pathway

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2021        PMID: 34031698      PMCID: PMC8336605          DOI: 10.1007/s00204-021-03076-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Toxicol        ISSN: 0340-5761            Impact factor:   5.153


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1.  Diacetyl Vapor Inhalation Induces Mixed, Granulocytic Lung Inflammation with Increased CD4+CD25+ T Cells in the Rat.

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