| Literature DB >> 36014562 |
Evelina Moliteo1, Monica Sciacca1, Antonino Palmeri1, Maria Papale1, Sara Manti1,2, Giuseppe Fabio Parisi1, Salvatore Leonardi1.
Abstract
There is substantial evidence in the literature that patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) have higher oxidative stress than patients with other diseases or healthy subjects. This results in an increase in reactive oxygen species (ROS) and in a deficit of antioxidant molecules and plays a fundamental role in the progression of chronic lung damage. Although it is known that recurrent infection-inflammation cycles in CF patients generate a highly oxidative environment, numerous clinical and preclinical studies suggest that the airways of a patient with CF present an inherently abnormal proinflammatory milieu due to elevated oxidative stress and abnormal lipid metabolism even before they become infected. This could be directly related to cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) deficiency, which appears to produce a redox imbalance in epithelial cells and extracellular fluids. This review aims to summarize the main mechanism by which CFTR deficiency is intrinsically responsible for the proinflammatory environment that characterizes the lung of a patient with CF.Entities:
Keywords: antioxidant; cystic fibrosis; cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator; oxidative stress
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36014562 PMCID: PMC9413234 DOI: 10.3390/molecules27165324
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.927
Figure 1Summary of the consequences of the loss of functional CFTR in cystic fibrosis patients.
Summary of the main studies pointing towards the involvement of oxidative stress in CF disease.
| Authors | Type of Study | Aim of the Study | Materials and Methods | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Checa et al. 2021 [ | Research article | To identify oxidative stress modulators in CF airway epithelial cells | Unbiased genome-wide RNAi screen using a randomized siRNA library | The usefulness of combining unbiased genome-wide knockdown to uncover new genes/pathways involved in oxidative stress to identify and characterize new drugs. |
| Guerini et al. 2022 [ | Review | To show the potential role of N-acetylcysteine in preventing and eliminating biofilms as an anti-inflammatory and antioxidant drug. | NA | It is possible to establish that this molecule offers great hope for the treatment of this disease. |
| Ciofu et al. 2014 [ | Cochrane systematic review | To synthesize existing data on the effect of antioxidants such as vitamin C, vitamin E, ß-carotene, selenium and glutathione in CF disease. | Randomized controlled studies and quasi-randomized controlled studies of people with cystic fibrosis comparing antioxidants to placebo or standard care. | Intensive antibiotic treatment and other drugs used in CF patients make it very difficult to evaluate the usefulness of antioxidant therapy. Based on the available evidence, glutathione (administered either orally or by inhalation) appears to improve lung function. |
| Sagel et al. 2018 [ | Research article | To evaluate the effects of an oral antioxidant-enriched multivitamin supplement in CF disease and clinical outcomes. | Multicenter randomized, double-blind, controlled trial; 73 pancreatic-insufficient subjects with CF 10 years of age and older with an FEV1 between 40% and 100% predicted were randomized to 16 weeks of an antioxidant-enriched multivitamin or control multivitamin without antioxidant enrichment. | Antioxidant supplementation was safe and well tolerated. It increased systemic antioxidant concentrations with a modest reduction in systemic inflammation after 4 weeks. Antioxidant treatment was also associated with a lower risk of first pulmonary exacerbation. |
| Bergeron et al. 2021 [ | Review | To summarize the current knowledge of CF genetics and therapies restoring CFTR function, particularly CFTR modulators and gene therapy. | NA | There is hope that the treatment burden can be decreased using highly effective CFTR modulator therapy. |
| Wu et al. 2003 [ | Research article | To analyze the role of glutathione in antioxidant defense, nutrient metabolism and regulation of cellular events. | NA | New knowledge on the efficient utilization of dietary protein or precursors for GSH synthesis and its nutritional status is critical for the development of effective therapeutic strategies to treat CF. |
| Zhao et al. 2019 [ | Systematic review and meta-analysis | To explore the influence of glutathione versus placebo on pulmonary function in cystic fibrosis. | NA | Glutathione improved pulmonary function in CF, as shown by the increase in FEV1. |
| Dickerhof et al. 2017 [ | Original article | To establish whether oxidative stress or glutathione status could be associated with bronchiectasis and whether glutathione deficiency could be linked to CF or a consequence of oxidative stress. | A total of 263 children and infants, out of which 205 had CF and 58 did not. Collectively, they provided 635 BAL samples. | Glutathione deficiency exists in the lower respiratory tract during early stages of cystic fibrosis lung disease, and treatments targeting glutathione have potential benefits for CF patients. |
| Causer et al. 2020 [ | Systematic review and meta-analysis. | To evaluate the concentrations of proinflammatory molecules and antioxidant substances in the serum or plasma of CF and non-CF control patients. | Mean contents of blood biomarkers from people with clinically stable CF and non-CF controls were used to calculate the standardized mean difference (SMD) and 95% confidence intervals (95% CI). | Protein carbonyls, F2-isoprostane 8- iso-prostaglandin F2α and malondialdehyde were significantly higher, and vitamins A, β-carotene and albumin were significantly lower in the plasma or serum of people with CF versus controls. |
| Dickerhof et al. 2020 [ | Research article | To investigate whether the 2-thioxanthine inhibitor AZM198, when given orally, can inhibit myeloperoxidases in airways of βENaC mice and block oxidative stress without compromising the host’s defense mechanisms. | Transgenic β-epithelial sodium channel (βENaC)-overexpressing mice (n = 10) were infected with | Blocking hypochlorous acid production in epithelia during pulmonary infections through inhibition of MPO improves morbidity in mice with CF-like lung inflammation without interfering with clearance of bacteria. Inhibition of MPO is an approach to limit oxidative stress in cystic fibrosis lung disease in humans. |
| Calabrese et al. 2014 [ | Research article | To evaluate the effect of inhaled GSH in patients with CF. | A total of 54 adult and 51 pediatric patients were randomized to receive inhaled GSH or placebo twice daily for 12 months. | In the pediatric group, a 12-month treatment with inhaled GSH did not lead to any significant increase in FEV1 from baseline. |
| Hewson et al. 2020 [ | Research article | To demonstrate that novel antioxidant therapy with the immediate precursor to glutathione, γ-glutamylcysteine (GGC), ameliorates LPS-induced cellular stress in vitro. | Human airway basal epithelial cells were obtained by brushing the nasal inferior turbinate and from bronchoalveolar lavage fluid during bronchoscopy. Proteomic analysis identified perturbations in several pathways related to cellular respiration, transcription, stress responses and cell–cell junction signaling. | Administration of exogenous γ-glutamylcysteine to CF airway epithelium in vitro can increase total intracellular glutathione levels and protect cells from LPS-induced cellular damage. |
| Pelullo et al. 2020 [ | Research article | To evaluate if oxidative stress and the aberrant expression levels of genes and microRNAs (miRNAs/miRs) implicated in detoxification may be associated with a better clinical outcome. | Used total RNA extracted from nasal epithelial cells and analyzed the expression levels of oxidative stress genes and one miRNA using quantitative PCR in a representative number of patients with CF compared with healthy individuals. | The activation of an inducible oxidative stress response to protect airway cells against reactive oxygen species injuries in CF patients. The correlations of HO-1 and miR-125b expression with an improved FEV1 value suggested that these factors may synergistically protect airway cells from oxidative stress damage, inflammation and apoptosis. |
| Di Pietro Caterina et al. 2020 [ | Review | Blunted heme oxygenase-1 activation in CF-affected cells contributes to hyperinflammation and reduction in the host defense against infections. They discussed potential cellular mechanisms that may lead to decreased heme oxygenase-1 induction in CF cells. | NA | Induction of heme oxygenase-1 may be beneficial for the treatment of CF lung disease. They discussed recent studies highlighting how endogenous heme oxygenase-1 can be induced by administration of controlled doses of CO to reduce lung hyperinflammation, oxidative stress, bacterial infection and dysfunctional ion transport, which are all hallmarks of CF lung disease. |
| Laselva et al. 2021 [ | Research article | To understand the role of dimethyl fumarate as an anti-inflammatory and antioxidant drug in CF, they focused on the effect of dimethyl fumarate on CF-related cytokine expression, ROS measurements and CFTR channel function. | Human immortalized bronchial epithelial cells: | Dimethyl fumarate reduced the inflammatory response to LPS stimulation in both CF and non-CF bronchial epithelial cells and restored the LPS-mediated decrease in Kaftrio-TM-mediated CFTR function in CF cells bearing the most common mutation. |
| Borcherding et al. 2019 [ | Research article | To determine the effects of CFTR modulation on Nrf2 in primary non-CF and CF human bronchial epithelial cells. | They used primary non-CF or CF human bronchial epithelial cells. | The primary finding of this study is that the F508del CFTR correctors VX809 and VX661 reverse the dysregulation of Nrf2 activity in primary human CF epithelial cells, and that this rescue is CFTR function-dependent. |
| Nandy Mazumdar et al. 2021 [ | Research article | Examined the role of BACH1 globally in the oxidative stress response in the airway epithelium and also its role in modulating CFTR expression. | RNA from confluent cultures was extracted with TRIzol (Invitrogen), and cDNA was prepared with the TaqMan reverse transcription kit. | BACH1 regulates CFTR gene expression by modulating locus architecture through its occupancy of enhancers and structural elements, and depletion of BACH1 alters the higher-order chromatin structure. |
| Scholte et al. 2019 [ | Research article | To determine whether lipid pathway dysregulation is also observed in BALF from children with CF and to identify biomarkers of early lung disease and potential therapeutic targets. | A comprehensive panel of lipids that included sphingolipids, oxylipins, isoprostanes and lysolipids, all bioactive lipid species known to be involved in inflammation and tissue remodeling, were measured in BALF from children with CF and age-matched non-CF patients with unexplained inflammatory disease | Several lipid biomarkers of early CF lung disease were identified, which point toward potential disease therapeutic approaches used to complement CFTR modulators. |
| Signorelli et al. 2021 [ | Research article | To demonstrate that Myriocin modulates the transcriptional profile of CF cells in order to restore autophagy, activate an antioxidative response, stimulate lipid metabolism and reduce lipid peroxidation. | They labeled the cells by means of a fluorescent probe with a high affinity for neutral lipids. We compared CF to healthy cells. | Lipid synthesis is increased in CF, whereas their catabolism is reduced, contributing to inflammation, oxidative stress and impaired autophagy. Myriocin, an inhibitor of sphingolipid synthesis, significantly reduces inflammation. Targeting sphingolipids’ de novo synthesis may counteract lipid accumulation by modulating the CF altered transcriptional profile, thus restoring autophagy and lipid metabolism homeostasis. |
| Veltman et al. 2021 [ | Research article | To examine the impact of CFTR deficiency on lipid metabolism and proinflammatory signaling in airway epithelium using a mass spectrometric protein array. | They used CF mouse lung and well-differentiated bronchial epithelial cell cultures of CFTR knockout pigs and CF patients. | Protein array analysis revealed differential expression and shedding of cytokines and growth factors from CF epithelial cells compared to non-CF cells, consistent with sterile inflammation and tissue remodeling under basal conditions. |
| Olveira et al. 2017 [ | Research article | To assess oxidation biomarkers and levels of inflammation to determine whether there is an association between these parameters and the intake of macrolides. | Cross-sectional study with clinically stable CF patients and healthy controls. Serum and plasma inflammatory and oxidative stress biomarkers were measured: interleukin-6, reactive C protein, tumor necrosis alpha, glutathione peroxidase, total antioxidant capacity, catalase and superoxide dismutase, together with markers of lipid peroxidation. | Inflammation and oxidation biomarkers were increased in patients with CF compared with controls. The use of azithromycin was associated with reduced TNF-α levels and did not influence oxidation parameters. |