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ST2 expression and release by the bronchial epithelium is downregulated in asthma

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posted on 2020-11-24, 09:51 authored by Davinder Kaur, Latifa Chachi, Edith Gomez, Nicolas Sylvius, Shailendra R Singh, Mohammadali Y Ramsheh, Ruth Saunders, Christopher E Brightling
Background: The airway epithelium plays an important role in wound repair, host defense and is involved in the immunopathogenesis of asthma. Genome wide association studies have described associations between ST2/Interleukin (IL)-33 genes in asthma, but its role in bronchial epithelium is unclear. Methods: ST2 expression was examined in subjects with asthma and healthy controls in bronchial epithelium from biopsies (n = 27 versus n = 9) and brushings (n = 34 versus n = 20) by immunohistochemistry and RNA-Seq. In human primary bronchial epithelial cells ST2 mRNA and protein expression were assessed by qPCR, flow cytometry, Western blotting, and immunofluorescence. IL-33 function in epithelial cells was examined by intracellular calcium measurements, wound healing assays, and synthetic activation by gene array and ELISA. Results: Bronchial epithelial ST2 protein expression was significantly decreased in biopsies in subjects with asthma compared to healthy controls (P =.039). IL1RL1 gene expression in bronchial brushes was not different between health and disease. In vitro primary bronchial epithelial cells expressed ST2 and IL-33 stimulation led to an increase in intracellular calcium, altered gene expression, but had no effect upon wound repair. Epithelial cells released sST2 spontaneously, which was reduced following stimulation with TNFα or poly-IC. Stimulation by TNFα or poly-IC did not affect the total ST2 expression by epithelial cell whereas surface ST2 decreased in response to TNFα, but not poly-IC. Conclusion: In asthma, bronchial epithelium protein expression of ST2 is decreased. Our in vitro findings suggest that this decrease might be a consequence of the pro-inflammatory environment in asthma or in response to viral infection.

Funding

National Centre for the Replacement Refinement and Reduction of Animals in Research

EU Framework 7. Grant Number: AirPROM

National Institute for Health Research

EDRF

Health Research. Grant Number: NC3R,

Chiesi

Novartis

Roche

History

Citation

Allergy, 2020, https://doi.org/10.1111/all.14436

Author affiliation

Department of Respiratory Sciences, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Allergy

Publisher

Wiley

issn

0105-4538

eissn

1398-9995

Acceptance date

2020-05-04

Copyright date

2020

Available date

2020-06-09

Spatial coverage

Denmark

Language

English

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