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Oxidative damage of SP-D abolishes control of eosinophil extracellular DNA trap formation

Authors :
Yousefi, Shida
Sharma, Satish K
Stojkov, Darko
Germic, Nina
Aeschlimann, Salome
Ge, Moyar Q
Flayer, Cameron H
Larson, Erik D
Redai, Imre G
Zhang, Suhong
Koziol-White, Cynthia J
Karikó, Katalin
Simon, Hans-Uwe
Haczku, Angela
Publisher :
Society for Leukocyte Biology

Abstract

The asthmatic airways are highly susceptible to inflammatory injury by air pollutants such as ozone (O ), characterized by enhanced activation of eosinophilic granulocytes and a failure of immune protective mechanisms. Eosinophil activation during asthma exacerbation contributes to the proinflammatory oxidative stress by high levels of nitric oxide (NO) production and extracellular DNA release. Surfactant protein-D (SP-D), an epithelial cell product of the airways, is a critical immune regulatory molecule with a multimeric structure susceptible to oxidative modifications. Using recombinant proteins and confocal imaging, we demonstrate here that SP-D directly bound to the membrane and inhibited extracellular DNA trap formation by human and murine eosinophils in a concentration and carbohydrate-dependent manner. Combined allergic airway sensitization and O exposure heightened eosinophilia and nos2 mRNA (iNOS) activation in the lung tissue and S-nitrosylation related de-oligomerisation of SP-D in the airways. In vitro reproduction of the iNOS action led to similar effects on SP-D. Importantly, S-nitrosylation abolished the ability of SP-D to block extracellular DNA trap formation. Thus, the homeostatic negative regulatory feedback between SP-D and eosinophils is destroyed by the NO-rich oxidative lung tissue environment in asthma exacerbations.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........543a8067fdde56e84e285afbb3e5fdf8