| Literature DB >> 35768822 |
Houman Goudarzi1, Hirokazu Kimura1, Hiroki Kimura1, Hironi Makita1, Munehiro Matsumoto1, Nozomu Takei1, Kaoruko Shimizu1, Masaru Suzuki1, Taku Watanabe1, Eiki Kikuchi1, Hiroshi Ohira1, Ichizo Tsujino1, Jun Sakakibara-Konishi1, Naofumi Shinagawa1, Noriharu Shijubo2, Hirokazu Sato3, Katsunori Shigehara4,5, Kichizo Kaga6, Yasuhiro Hida6, Soichi Murakami7, Yuma Ebihara7, Akinobu Nakamura8, Hideaki Miyoshi9, Satoshi Hirano7, Nobuyuki Hizawa10, Tatsuya Atsumi8, Shau-Ku Huang11,12, Yoichi M Ito13, Masaharu Nishimura1, Satoshi Konno14.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Club cell secretory protein-16 (CC16) is a major anti-inflammatory protein expressed in the airway; however, the potential role of CC16 on overweight/obese asthma has not been assessed. In this study, we examined whether obesity reduces airway/circulatory CC16 levels using experimental and epidemiological studies. Then, we explored the mediatory role of CC16 in the relationship of overweight/obesity with clinical asthma measures.Entities:
Keywords: Asthma; BMI; CC16; Clinical asthma measures; Overweight and obesity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35768822 PMCID: PMC9241210 DOI: 10.1186/s12931-022-02038-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Respir Res ISSN: 1465-9921
Fig. 1Association of circulating CC16 levels and categorical BMI in three populations. The values are shown as the least-square means, and the error bars depict the upper and lower 95% CI. Figures indicate fully adjusted associations between BMI values and circulatory CC16 levels (ng/mL). Model 1 (partially adjusted model): adjusted by age, sex, smoking status, and history of doctor-diagnosed asthma for population 1; adjusted by sex, age, smoking status for population 2; adjusted by age, sex, smoking status, and asthma severity for population 3; for the combination of populations 1, 2, and 3; adjusted by age, sex, and smoking status. Model 2 (fully adjusted model): adjusted for covariates in Model 1 and the CC16 A38G polymorphism (rs3741240)
Fig. 2Decreased number of CC16 expressing cells in small airways of obese mice and overweight/obese humans. Representative photomicrographs of CC16 immuno-histochemical staining of obese vs. control mice (n = 5 mice per group) (A) and overweight/obese vs. lean human airways (B). Comparison of the percentage of CC16 expressing cells in the small airways of obese vs. normal control mice (n = 5 mice per group) (C). Comparison of the percentage of CC16 expressing cells in the small airways of overweight/obese vs. lean humans (n = 10 for the lean group, and n = 9 for the overweight/obese group) (D). The number of cells expressing each target protein in the small airways was manually and randomly counted in five randomly selected fields by two blinded examiners to determine the average percentage of positive cells/sample. The scale bars are 100 µm. ※split-plot method (ANOVA)
Fig. 3BMI, circulatory CC16, and airway hyperresponsiveness in young healthy participants (Population 2). A The figure indicates the unadjusted associations between BMI and Log Dmin. B Mediation analyses were performed to estimate the direct and mediation effect of BMI on Log Dmin (airway hyperresponsiveness; AHR) mediated by circulatory CC16 in young healthy participants. Numbers in the parentheses indicate the estimates, 95% confidence intervals (in the parentheses), and p-values
Fig. 4Association among, BMI, circulatory CC16, and asthma severity in patients with asthma (Population 3). A The values are shown as the least square means (95% confidence interval; CI). The figure shows the fully adjusted associations between asthma severity and circulatory CC16 levels (ng/mL; model 2). B Mediation analyses were performed to estimate the direct and mediation effect of BMI on asthma severity mediated by circulatory CC16 in asthma patients. Numbers indicate the odds ratio, 95% CIs (in parentheses), and p-values
Fig. 5Association among BMI, circulatory CC16, and inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) dose in patients with asthma (Population 3). A The values are shown as the least square means (95% confidence interval; CI). Patients with current oral corticosteroid (OCS) use were excluded (n = 45). The figure shows the unadjusted association between BMI and ICS dose. B Mediation analyses were performed to estimate the direct and mediation effects of circulatory CC16 levels on the association between BMI and ICS dose in patients with asthma. Numbers indicate the estimates, 95% CIs (in the parentheses), and p-values
Decreased serum CC16 levels and risk of high dose ICS requirement in asthma patients
| Impact for a 1-SD decrease in serum CC16 levels | OR (95% CI) | p-value |
|---|---|---|
| Crude | 1.87 (1.28, 2.73) | < 0.001 |
| Model 1 | 1.88 (1.20, 2.83) | 0.001 |
| Model 2 | 1.75 (1.16, 2.65) | 0.004 |
Patients with current oral corticosteroid use were excluded (n = 45). The figure indicates unadjusted associations between values of serum CC16 and ICS dose. Model 1 adjusted for age, sex, smoking status, pack-year, CC16 A38G polymorphism (rs3741240). Model 2 adjusted for covariates in Model 1 and BMI
Equivalent to budesonide dose was used to divide asthma patients into high (n = 82) vs non-high groups (n = 79) according to the cutoff values provided by the GINA guideline
OR odds ratio, CI confidence interval