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Suppression of NLRX1 in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

Authors :
Andrew Phillip West
Bo Hye Kim
Min-jong Kang
Rober Homer
Jenny P.-Y. Ting
John Tedrow
Daniel J. Boffa
Jack A. Elias
Yang Zhou
Chang Min Yoon
Gerald S. Shadel
Woo Jin Kim
Maor Sauler
Chang-Min Lee
Naftali Kaminski
Yeon-Mok Oh
Anish Dhamija
Chun Geun Lee
Source :
Journal of Clinical Investigation. 125:2458-2462
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
American Society for Clinical Investigation, 2015.

Abstract

Cigarette smoke (CS) and viruses promote the inflammation and remodeling associated with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The MAVS/RIG-I–like helicase (MAVS/RLH) pathway and inflammasome-dependent innate immune pathways are important mediators of these responses. At baseline, the MAVS/RLH pathway is suppressed, and this inhibition must be reversed to engender tissue effects; however, the mechanisms that mediate activation and repression of the pathway have not been defined. In addition, the regulation and contribution of MAVS/RLH signaling in CS-induced inflammation and remodeling responses and in the development of human COPD remain unaddressed. Here, we demonstrate that expression of NLRX1, which inhibits the MAVS/RLH pathway and regulates other innate immune responses, was markedly decreased in 3 independent cohorts of COPD patients. NLRX1 suppression correlated directly with disease severity and inversely with pulmonary function, quality of life, and prognosis. In murine models, CS inhibited NLRX1, and CS-induced inflammation, alveolar destruction, protease induction, structural cell apoptosis, and inflammasome activation were augmented in NLRX1-deficient animals. Conversely, MAVS deficiency abrogated this CS-induced inflammation and remodeling. Restoration of NLRX1 in CS-exposed animals ameliorated alveolar destruction. These data support a model in which CS-dependent NLRX1 inhibition facilitates MAVS/RHL activation and subsequent inflammation, remodeling, protease, cell death, and inflammasome responses.

Details

ISSN :
00219738
Volume :
125
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Investigation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fa70cbdcf4ae245c3def990b0cf43366
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/jci71747