1. A Small Molecule BH3-mimetic Suppresses Cigarette Smoke-Induced Mucous Expression in Airway Epithelial Cells
- Author
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Mohan L. Sopori, Shashi P. Singh, Chien-An Andy Hu, Shebin George, Shah S. Hussain, Hitendra S. Chand, and Rahul Dev Jayant
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Apoptosis ,Mucin 5AC ,Mice ,0302 clinical medicine ,Lung ,Multidisciplinary ,Chemistry ,respiratory system ,Phenotype ,Human AECs ,3. Good health ,Cell biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-bcl-2 ,Medicine ,Goblet Cells ,Signal transduction ,MUC1 Expression ,Signal Transduction ,MAP Kinase Signaling System ,Science ,Respiratory Mucosa ,Airway Epithelial Cells (AECs) ,Article ,Cigarette Smoking ,03 medical and health sciences ,Downregulation and upregulation ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins ,Tobacco ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Extracellular-signal Regulating Kinase 1/2 (ERK1/2) ,Hyperplasia ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-ets ,Mucin ,Epithelial Growth Factor Receptor (EGFR) ,Epithelial Cells ,Genes, erbB-1 ,Mucus ,Epithelium ,Peptide Fragments ,030104 developmental biology ,030228 respiratory system ,Respiratory epithelium ,Apoptosis Regulatory Proteins - Abstract
Cigarette smoke (CS) exposure is one of the primary risk factors associated with the chronic mucous hypersecretion (CMH). The antiapoptotic protein, Bcl-2 sustains hyperplastic mucous cells, and the airway epithelium of ex-smokers with CMH as well as mice exposed to chronic CS showed increased Bcl-2 expression. Therefore, we investigated whether Bcl-2 plays a role in CS-induced mucous expression. Primary airway epithelial cells (AECs) of murine and human origin were treated with CS extract (CSE), and there was a concentration- and time-dependent increase in secretory mucin (MUC5AC), mucous regulator (SPDEF) and Bcl-2 expression. Using differentiated human AECs cultured on air-liquid interface, EGFR and ERK1/2 pathways were interrogated. Bcl-2 activity was blocked using a small molecule BH3 mimetic ABT-263 that disrupts the Bcl-2 interaction with pro-apoptotic proteins. The ABT-263 treatment resulted in the downregulation of CSE-induced mucus expression and disrupted the EGFR-signaling while inducing the apoptosis and the pro-apoptotic protein, Bik expression. This strategy significantly suppressed the mainstream CS-induced mucous phenotype in a 3-D human airway epithelium model. Therefore, the present study suggests that CS induces Bcl-2 expression to help promote mucous cell survival; and small molecule BH3 mimetics targeting Bcl-2 could be useful in suppressing the CS-induced mucous response.
- Published
- 2018