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EGF-induced bronchial epithelial cells drive neutrophil chemotactic and anti-apoptotic activity in asthma

EGF-induced bronchial epithelial cells drive neutrophil chemotactic and anti-apoptotic activity in asthma
EGF-induced bronchial epithelial cells drive neutrophil chemotactic and anti-apoptotic activity in asthma
Chronic damage and repair of the bronchial epithelium are features of asthma. We have previously reported that ex vivo stimulation of normal bronchial epithelial cells with epidermal growth factor (EGF), a key factor of epithelial repair, enhances the mechanisms of neutrophil accumulation, thereby promoting neutrophil defences during acute injury but potentially enhancing inflammation in chronic airway diseases. We have now sought to (i) determine whether this EGF-dependent pro-neutrophil activity is increased in asthma, where EGF and its epithelial receptor are over-expressed, and (ii) elucidate some of the mechanisms underlying this asthmatic epithelial-neutrophil interaction. Primary bronchial epithelial cells (PBEC) from healthy subjects, mild asthmatics and moderate-to-severe asthmatics (Mod/Sev) were stimulated with EGF, a model that mimics a repairing epithelium. Conditioned culture media (EGF-CM) were assessed for neutrophil chemotactic and anti-apoptotic activities and inflammatory mediator production. EGF induced the epithelium to produce soluble mediators with neutrophil chemotactic (p<0.001) and pro-survival (p?=?0.021) activities which were related to the clinical severity of asthma (trend p?=?0.010 and p?=?0.009, respectively). This was associated with enhanced IL-6, IL-8, GM-CSF and TNF-? release, and cytokine-neutralising experiments using EGF-CM from Mod/Sev asthmatics demonstrated a role for GM-CSF in neutrophil survival (p<0.001). Pre-treatment of neutrophils with specific inhibitors of the myeloid-restricted class I phosphatidylinositol-3-OH kinase (PI(3)K) isoforms showed that the EGF-CM from Mod/Sev asthmatics depended on the ? (p<0.021) but not ? isoforms, while neutrophil survival required multiple class I PI(3)Ks. The EGF-induced chemotactic, but not pro-survival activity, involved RhoA signaling in neutrophils (p?=?0.012). EGF whose activity is upregulated in asthma induces ex vivo the epithelium from asthmatic patients to produce pro-neutrophil activities; these are related to asthma severity and, in moderate-to-severe asthmatics, involves class IB PI(3)K? signaling, providing a potential therapeutic target for neutrophilic forms of asthma.
1932-6203
1-10
Uddin, Mohib
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Lau, Laurie C.
2af8045d-6162-4939-aba7-28dd2f60f6a8
Seumois, Grégory
0be7d3d6-5526-458c-aa5c-cce52410a2ed
Vijayanand, Pandurangan
79514f33-66cf-47cc-a8fa-46bbfc21b7d1
Staples, Karl J.
e0e9d80f-0aed-435f-bd75-0c8818491fee
Bagmane, Dinesh
9cfd53e9-bddc-451d-a3ae-d8a84481c09a
Cornelius, Victoria
b75c21d7-2c25-495c-9107-e39453a72bdd
Dorinsky, Paul
eb24360e-315e-46ae-a2f0-ab15bbf202b9
Davies, Donna E.
7de8fdc7-3640-4e3a-aa91-d0e03f990c38
Djukanović, Ratko
d9a45ee7-6a80-4d84-a0ed-10962660a98d
Uddin, Mohib
7b8953f2-baa0-4ad0-836b-ecb89cba70c2
Lau, Laurie C.
2af8045d-6162-4939-aba7-28dd2f60f6a8
Seumois, Grégory
0be7d3d6-5526-458c-aa5c-cce52410a2ed
Vijayanand, Pandurangan
79514f33-66cf-47cc-a8fa-46bbfc21b7d1
Staples, Karl J.
e0e9d80f-0aed-435f-bd75-0c8818491fee
Bagmane, Dinesh
9cfd53e9-bddc-451d-a3ae-d8a84481c09a
Cornelius, Victoria
b75c21d7-2c25-495c-9107-e39453a72bdd
Dorinsky, Paul
eb24360e-315e-46ae-a2f0-ab15bbf202b9
Davies, Donna E.
7de8fdc7-3640-4e3a-aa91-d0e03f990c38
Djukanović, Ratko
d9a45ee7-6a80-4d84-a0ed-10962660a98d

Uddin, Mohib, Lau, Laurie C., Seumois, Grégory, Vijayanand, Pandurangan, Staples, Karl J., Bagmane, Dinesh, Cornelius, Victoria, Dorinsky, Paul, Davies, Donna E. and Djukanović, Ratko (2013) EGF-induced bronchial epithelial cells drive neutrophil chemotactic and anti-apoptotic activity in asthma. PLoS ONE, 8 (9), 1-10, [e72502]. (doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0072502). (PMID:24039773)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Chronic damage and repair of the bronchial epithelium are features of asthma. We have previously reported that ex vivo stimulation of normal bronchial epithelial cells with epidermal growth factor (EGF), a key factor of epithelial repair, enhances the mechanisms of neutrophil accumulation, thereby promoting neutrophil defences during acute injury but potentially enhancing inflammation in chronic airway diseases. We have now sought to (i) determine whether this EGF-dependent pro-neutrophil activity is increased in asthma, where EGF and its epithelial receptor are over-expressed, and (ii) elucidate some of the mechanisms underlying this asthmatic epithelial-neutrophil interaction. Primary bronchial epithelial cells (PBEC) from healthy subjects, mild asthmatics and moderate-to-severe asthmatics (Mod/Sev) were stimulated with EGF, a model that mimics a repairing epithelium. Conditioned culture media (EGF-CM) were assessed for neutrophil chemotactic and anti-apoptotic activities and inflammatory mediator production. EGF induced the epithelium to produce soluble mediators with neutrophil chemotactic (p<0.001) and pro-survival (p?=?0.021) activities which were related to the clinical severity of asthma (trend p?=?0.010 and p?=?0.009, respectively). This was associated with enhanced IL-6, IL-8, GM-CSF and TNF-? release, and cytokine-neutralising experiments using EGF-CM from Mod/Sev asthmatics demonstrated a role for GM-CSF in neutrophil survival (p<0.001). Pre-treatment of neutrophils with specific inhibitors of the myeloid-restricted class I phosphatidylinositol-3-OH kinase (PI(3)K) isoforms showed that the EGF-CM from Mod/Sev asthmatics depended on the ? (p<0.021) but not ? isoforms, while neutrophil survival required multiple class I PI(3)Ks. The EGF-induced chemotactic, but not pro-survival activity, involved RhoA signaling in neutrophils (p?=?0.012). EGF whose activity is upregulated in asthma induces ex vivo the epithelium from asthmatic patients to produce pro-neutrophil activities; these are related to asthma severity and, in moderate-to-severe asthmatics, involves class IB PI(3)K? signaling, providing a potential therapeutic target for neutrophilic forms of asthma.

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Published date: 11 September 2013
Organisations: Clinical & Experimental Sciences

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Local EPrints ID: 360132
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/360132
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: b3722bb7-b239-4840-9128-de9fbd8337e5
ORCID for Pandurangan Vijayanand: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7067-9723
ORCID for Karl J. Staples: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3844-6457
ORCID for Donna E. Davies: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5117-2991
ORCID for Ratko Djukanović: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6039-5612

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Date deposited: 27 Nov 2013 13:29
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:27

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Contributors

Author: Mohib Uddin
Author: Laurie C. Lau
Author: Grégory Seumois
Author: Pandurangan Vijayanand ORCID iD
Author: Karl J. Staples ORCID iD
Author: Dinesh Bagmane
Author: Victoria Cornelius
Author: Paul Dorinsky
Author: Donna E. Davies ORCID iD

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