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Synthetic Response of Stimulated Respiratory Epithelium: Modulation by Prednisolone and iKK2 Inhibition

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posted on 2013-10-16, 13:21 authored by Lucy Bianca Woodman, Wing Yan Heidi Wan, Roberta Milone, Ken Grace, Ana Sousa, Rick Williamson, Christopher E. Brightling
Background: The airway epithelium plays a central role in wound repair and host defense and is implicated in the immunopathogenesis of asthma. Whether there are intrinsic differences between the synthetic capacity of epithelial cells derived from subjects with asthma and healthy control subjects and how this mediator release is modulated by antiinflammatory therapy remains uncertain. We sought to examine the synthetic function of epithelial cells from different locations in the airway tree from subjects with and without asthma and to determine the effects of antiinflamatory therapies upon this synthetic capacity. Methods: Primary epithelial cells were derived from 17 subjects with asthma and 16 control subjects. The release of 13 cytokines and chemokines from nasal, bronchial basal, and air-liquid interface differentiated epithelial cells before and after stimulation with IL-1β, IL-1β and interferon- γ, or Poly-IC (Toll-like receptor 3 agonist) was measured using MesoScale discovery or enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, and the effects of prednisolone and an inhibitor of nuclear factor κ-B2 (IKK2i) were determined. Results: The pattern of release of cytokines and chemokines was significantly different between nasal, bronchial basal, and differentiated epithelial cells but not between health and disease. Stimulation of the epithelial cells caused marked upregulation of most mediators, which were broadly corticosteroid unresponsive but attenuated by IKK2i. Conclusion: Synthetic capacity of primary airway epithelial cells varied between location and degree of differentiation but was not disease specifi c. Activation of epithelial cells by proinflamatory cytokines and toll-like receptor 3 agonism is attenuated by IKK2i, but not corticosteroids, suggesting that IKK2i may represent an important novel therapy for asthma.

Funding

This study was funded by GlaxoSmithKline and a Wellcome Senior Clinical Fellowship (Dr Brightling). Novel compounds were supplied by GlaxoSmithKline.

History

Citation

Chest, 2013, 143 (6), pp. 1656–1666

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY/School of Medicine/Department of Infection, Immunity and Inflammation

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Chest

Publisher

American College of Chest Physicians (ACCP)

issn

0012-3692

eissn

1931-3543

Copyright date

2013

Available date

2013-10-16

Publisher version

http://journal.publications.chestnet.org/article.aspx?articleid=1485291

Language

en

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