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Endothelial activation and increased heparan sulfate expression in cystic fibrosis

Endothelial activation and increased heparan sulfate expression in cystic fibrosis
Endothelial activation and increased heparan sulfate expression in cystic fibrosis
Rationale: Pulmonary disease in cystic fibrosis (CF) is characterized by an exaggerated interleukin (IL)-8–driven, neutrophilic, inflammatory response to infection. Binding of IL-8 to heparan sulfate (HS)–containing proteoglycans (HSPG) facilitates binding of the chemokine to its specific receptor, stabilizes and prolongs IL-8 activity, and protects it from proteolysis. We hypothesized that increased expression of HSPG contributes to the sustained inflammatory response in CF bronchial tissue.

Objectives: Our objectives were to analyze the distribution and abundance of IL-8 and HS, in intact and cleaved forms, in bronchial tissue from adult patients with CF or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and a control group without inflammatory airway disease.

Methods: Immunostaining and quantitative image analysis were applied to ethanol-fixed and paraffin-embedded tissue obtained at transplant in patients with CF or COPD, or postmortem in the control group.

Measurements and Main Results: Quantitative immunohistochemical analysis demonstrated significant disease-related differences. Intact HS was significantly more abundant in epithelial and endothelial basement membranes in CF than in COPD or the control group. Conversely, cleaved HS was significantly more abundant in COPD than the other groups. More IL-8–positive blood vessels were observed in CF and COPD compared with the control group, whereas more extensive IL-8 expression in the epithelium was observed in CF compared with COPD.

Conclusions: Sustained neutrophil recruitment in the CF airway may therefore be related not only to increased IL-8 expression but also to the increased stability and prolonged activity and retention of IL-8 when it is bound to HSPG in bronchial tissue.
chemokine, inflammation, neutrophil
1073-449X
892-898
Solic, Nicola
e8808086-3cda-43c1-a122-681908c9a4f3
Wilson, John
8abb877b-9f99-464c-aa06-959c5e1faefc
Wilson, Susan J.
21c6875d-6870-441b-ae7a-603562a646b8
Shute, Janis K.
a5eef853-50ae-4abf-9e34-1c873601437f
Solic, Nicola
e8808086-3cda-43c1-a122-681908c9a4f3
Wilson, John
8abb877b-9f99-464c-aa06-959c5e1faefc
Wilson, Susan J.
21c6875d-6870-441b-ae7a-603562a646b8
Shute, Janis K.
a5eef853-50ae-4abf-9e34-1c873601437f

Solic, Nicola, Wilson, John, Wilson, Susan J. and Shute, Janis K. (2005) Endothelial activation and increased heparan sulfate expression in cystic fibrosis. American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 172 (7), 892-898. (doi:10.1164/rccm.200409-1207OC).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Rationale: Pulmonary disease in cystic fibrosis (CF) is characterized by an exaggerated interleukin (IL)-8–driven, neutrophilic, inflammatory response to infection. Binding of IL-8 to heparan sulfate (HS)–containing proteoglycans (HSPG) facilitates binding of the chemokine to its specific receptor, stabilizes and prolongs IL-8 activity, and protects it from proteolysis. We hypothesized that increased expression of HSPG contributes to the sustained inflammatory response in CF bronchial tissue.

Objectives: Our objectives were to analyze the distribution and abundance of IL-8 and HS, in intact and cleaved forms, in bronchial tissue from adult patients with CF or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and a control group without inflammatory airway disease.

Methods: Immunostaining and quantitative image analysis were applied to ethanol-fixed and paraffin-embedded tissue obtained at transplant in patients with CF or COPD, or postmortem in the control group.

Measurements and Main Results: Quantitative immunohistochemical analysis demonstrated significant disease-related differences. Intact HS was significantly more abundant in epithelial and endothelial basement membranes in CF than in COPD or the control group. Conversely, cleaved HS was significantly more abundant in COPD than the other groups. More IL-8–positive blood vessels were observed in CF and COPD compared with the control group, whereas more extensive IL-8 expression in the epithelium was observed in CF compared with COPD.

Conclusions: Sustained neutrophil recruitment in the CF airway may therefore be related not only to increased IL-8 expression but also to the increased stability and prolonged activity and retention of IL-8 when it is bound to HSPG in bronchial tissue.

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More information

Published date: 1 October 2005
Keywords: chemokine, inflammation, neutrophil

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 27436
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/27436
ISSN: 1073-449X
PURE UUID: 60bb5047-6040-4fab-afb5-6a272238413d
ORCID for Susan J. Wilson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1305-8271

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 25 Apr 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 07:18

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Contributors

Author: Nicola Solic
Author: John Wilson
Author: Susan J. Wilson ORCID iD
Author: Janis K. Shute

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