|
|
||||||||




,
* Lung Biology Center, Department of Medicine,
Division of Pulmonary/Critical Care Medicine, and
Graduate Program in Immunology, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94158;
Division of Allergy-Immunology, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL 60611; and
¶ Division of Infectious Diseases and Geographic Medicine, Stanford Medical School, Stanford, CA 94305
| Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
, a Th1 cytokine induced during virus infection. We conclude that pendrin regulates ASL thickness and may be an important contributor to asthma exacerbations induced by viral infections or allergens. | Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
(8), which has effects on epithelial and other cells in the airway (9). Airway epithelial cells also play central roles in the response to allergens. In this setting, Th2 cells and other cells produce IL-13 and IL-4, cytokines that act directly on airway epithelial cells to induce mucus production and airway hyperreactivity (10, 11). A recent clinical trial found that inhalation of an inhibitor of IL-13 and IL-4 reduced the late asthmatic response to allergen challenge (12), suggesting that these mechanisms discovered in mouse models are relevant to humans with asthma. Changes in the airway surface liquid (ASL)3 that covers the epithelium can cause airway disease. ASL is comprised of a mucus layer and a periciliary layer (13). Ciliary beating and coughing propel ASL toward the upper airways, thereby removing mucus and inhaled pathogens and particles (14). ASL thickness is regulated by active ion transport across epithelial cells (15). In cystic fibrosis, mutations in the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator gene (CFTR) result in decreased chloride secretion, ASL dehydration, impaired mucus clearance, and airway inflammation and obstruction (16). Similar pathology was seen in mice with ASL dehydration resulting from transgenic overexpression of the epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) (17). Changes in ion transport have also been implicated in asthma pathogenesis. IL-13 or IL-4 stimulation alters chloride conductance and converts human bronchial epithelial cells from an absorptive to a secretory phenotype, which may help to "flush" particulates and mucus from the airway lumen (18). In a recent genome-wide analysis, CLCA1 (calcium-activated chloride channel 1) was the most highly up-regulated gene in bronchial epithelial cells of asthmatics compared with healthy controls (19). Despite its name, CLCA1 is not a channel but CLCA1 does affect chloride conductance by an unknown mechanism (20). Increased expression of CLCA1 may be important in asthma pathogenesis since overexpression of its mouse ortholog (known as Gob-5 or Clca3) was reported to cause airway inflammation and airway hyperreactivity (21), although the precise contributions of CLCA1 and other CLCA family members are still controversial (22, 23, 24). Other molecules involved in the transport of ions, including the Na+-K+-Cl– cotransporter NKCC1 (25), may also play a role, but the contributions of these molecules to asthma pathogenesis is unknown.
We previously reported that mRNA encoding the anion transporter pendrin (solute carrier family 26 member 4, Slc26a4) is increased in acute allergic airway disease (26), suggesting that pendrin could contribute to allergic airway disease and might play a role in asthma. Pendrin is a 780-aa anion transporter that is expressed in the inner ear, the kidney, and the thyroid (27). Pendrin can exchange chloride for other anions, including bicarbonate, oxalate, and hydroxyl ions (28). In Pendred syndrome, a common form of hereditary hearing loss caused by mutations in SLC26A4 (29), impaired anion and water uptake in the inner ear results in endolymphatic swelling and structural aberrations (30). Relatively little is known about the role of pendrin in the lung. We found 10–40-fold increases in mouse pendrin (Slc26a4) mRNA in the lung after allergen challenge or transgenic overexpression of IL-13 (26) and a >200-fold increase in SLC26A4 mRNA following IL-13 stimulation of cultured normal human bronchial epithelial (NHBE) cells (31). It has recently been shown that IL-4 increases expression of both SLC26A4 mRNA and pendrin protein in NHBE cells, resulting in increased secretion of thiocyanate, an anion with antimicrobial properties (32). A very recent report found that overexpression of pendrin in the airway resulted in mucus overproduction, airway hyperreactivity, and inflammation (33). However, the contributions of pendrin to allergic airway disease have not yet been directly addressed.
We hypothesized that allergen-induced increases in pendrin contribute to altered airway function by affecting ASL hydration. To address this issue, we took advantage of the availability of pendrin-deficient (Slc26a4–/–) mice (30). Although these mice are deaf, thyroid function is unimpaired and kidney function is normal except during sodium restriction (30, 34). We used Slc26a4–/– mice to study the role of pendrin in the in vivo response to allergen and Slc26a4–/– mouse tracheal epithelial cells (MTEC) to investigate how pendrin affects ASL thickness. To determine whether pendrin is also induced by viral infection, the most common precipitant of asthma exacerbations, we also analyzed the expression of SLC26A4 in nasal epithelium from human subjects with naturally occurring rhinovirus infections and in cultured NHBE cells infected with rhinovirus. The results of these studies indicate that pendrin is induced by stimuli that provoke asthma exacerbations and contributes to airway inflammation and hyperreactivity.
| Materials and Methods |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Pendrin-deficient (Slc26a4–/–) mice on a 129Sv/Ev genetic background were generously provided by E. Green (30). Mice were bred and maintained under pathogen-free conditions. Slc26a4+/+ and Slc26a4+/– littermates were used as controls for the in vivo allergen challenge model. All experiments were performed according to the guidelines of the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) Committee on Animal Research.
Sensitization and challenge with OVA
Age- and sex-matched 6–8-wk-old mice were sensitized by i.p. injection of OVA (Sigma-Aldrich) on days 0, 7, and 14 as reported previously (26). The sensitizing emulsion consisted of 50 µg OVA and 10 mg of aluminum potassium sulfate in 200 µl of saline. On days 21, 22, and 23, the sensitized mice were lightly anesthetized by isoflurane inhalation and challenged with 100 µg OVA in 30 µl of saline administered intranasally. Control mice were treated in the same way, except that OVA was omitted during both the sensitization and challenge phases.
Assessment of airway reactivity, inflammation, OVA-specific IgE, and mucus
Airway reactivity was measured as previously reported (35). Briefly, on day 24, mice were anesthetized, intratracheally intubated, mechanically ventilated, and paralyzed, and airway resistance was measured at baseline and following i.v. administration of increasing doses of acetylcholine (0.03, 0.1, 0.3, 1, and 3 µg/g body weight). Bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid leukocytes and serum OVA-specific IgE levels were measured as previously described (26). Paraffin-embedded 5-µm lung sections were stained with H&E and with periodic acid-Schiff for evaluation of mucus production. The severity of peribronchial inflammation was scored by a blinded observer using the following features: 0, normal; 1, few cells; 2, a ring of inflammatory cells 1 cell layer deep; 3, a ring of inflammatory cells 2–4 cells deep; 4, a ring of inflammatory cells of >4 cells deep (36). Epithelial cell mucus content was determined using stereology as previously reported (11).
Analysis of mouse gene expression by quantitative RT-PCR
Total RNA from mouse lungs was isolated using TRIzol (Invitrogen) and purified using the RNeasy kit (Qiagen). First-strand cDNA synthesis was performed using the SuperScript First-Strand cDNA Synthesis System (Invitrogen). Total RNA from MTEC cells was isolated using the RNeasy kit (Qiagen), and first-strand cDNA synthesis was performed using the QuantiTect Reverse Transcription Kit (Qiagen). Mouse Slc26a4 primers were 5'-CATCTGCAGAACCAGGTCAA-3' and 5'-GCATTCATCTCTGCCTCCAT-3'. Mouse sodium channel, nonvoltage-gated, type I,
(Scnn1a) primers were 5'-CGGAGTTGCTAAACTCAACATC-3' and 5'-TGGAGACCAGTACCGGCT-3'. Mouse Scnn1b primers were 5'-CTGCAGTCATCGGAACTTCA-3' and 5'-CCGATGTCCAGGATCAACTT-3'. Mouse Scnn1g primers were 5'-CTTCTTCACTGGTCGGAAGC-3' and 5'-CTGAAGGTGTAGGTGGCACA-3'. Mouse cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (Cftr) primers were 5'-AAGGCGGCCTATATGAGGTT-3' and 5'-GGACGATTCCGTTGATGACT-3'. Mouse Clca3 primers were 5'-GCCCTCTAGGCAATGATGAG-3' and 5'-CCTGTCTTGTGGCCCATACT-3'. Mouse β-actin (Actb) primers were 5'-TGTTACCAACTGGGACGACA-3' and 5'-GGGGTGTTGAAGGTCTCAAA-3'. Mouse Gapd primers were 5'-GCCTTCCGTGTTCCTACCC-3' and 5'-TGCCTGCTTCACCACCTTC-3'. Sequences of other primers and probes used herein have been previously reported (31). SYBR Green real-time PCR was performed using the 7900HT Fast Real-Time PCR System (Applied Biosystems). The threshold cycle (Ct) of each transcript was normalized to the average Ct for Actb and Gapd. Fold differences were determined by the 2–
Ct method (37).
Culture of MTEC
MTEC were isolated from age-matched 6–14-wk-old pendrin-deficient mice and wild-type littermate controls and cultured as previously described (38). Cells were considered to be confluent when transepithelial resistance was >1000
cm2. After reaching confluence, MTEC were cultured at air-liquid interface for 14–17 days in the absence or presence of 20 ng/ml murine IL-13 (PeproTech) as indicated in the text.
Measurement of ASL thickness
ASL thickness was measured using previously reported methods (39). Briefly, dextran-conjugated BCECF (2',7'-bis(2-carboxyethyl)-5(6)-carboxyfluorescein) (Invitrogen) was suspended in FC-72 (3M) at a concentration of 10 mg/ml, and 20–50 µl of the suspension was deposited onto the ASL 3 min before measurement. ASL thickness was measured with a Nikon EZ-C1 laser scanning confocal system and a Nikon Eclipse FN1 upright microscope. Fluorescent images were obtained using a x10 objective (Plan Fluor, numerical aperture 0.30, working distance 15.8 mm). ASL thickness was determined from the fluorescence peak width (width at half-maximal fluorescence) along the z-axis. Standards made using known volumes of BCECF-containing solution sandwiched between coverglasses were used for calibration. ASL was exposed to a fully humidified 5% CO2 atmosphere, and air and a stage were maintained at 37°C using a Tempcontol heating system (PeCon).
Collection of human nasal samples during common colds
The clinical study was approved by the UCSF Committee of Human Research, and all subjects signed a written informed consent. Asthmatic and nonasthmatic control subjects were recruited within 3 days of onset of common colds through advertisements on the internet and campus flyers and by contacting subjects from previous studies. Subjects were characterized by spirometry, allergy skin testing, and methacholine bronchial reactivity as we previously described (40). Subjects had three visits at 1–3 d (visit 1), 5–7 d (visit 2), and
42 d (visit 3, baseline) after cold symptom onset. In visit 1, nasal lavage was used to identify rhinovirus and other viruses as previously described (41). Subjects recorded nasal and chest symptoms during the week after visit 1 and the week before visit 3. Nasal cold symptoms were scored by adding together daily scores for each of eight symptoms (nasal discharge, nasal congestion, sneezing, throat discomfort, tiredness, cough, fever/chills, and headache; each scored from 0 to 3) during 1 wk (yielding a possible weekly range of 0–168). The final nasal cold symptom score was calculated as the difference between score for the week after visit 1 (cold) and the score for the week before visit 3 (baseline). Chest symptoms were the change of scores for five symptoms (shortness of breath, chest tightness, wheezing, cough, and sputum production; each scored 0–10; possible weekly range, 0–350). At each visit, three nasal lavages with 10 ml of normal saline solution each were performed before collecting nasal mucosal samples using Rhino-Probe curettes (Arlington Scientific). Mucosal samples were collected from the inferomedial aspect of the inferior turbinate on one side at visit 1, from the other side at visit 2, and from either side at visit 3. Nasal mucosal samples were immediately placed in RNeasy kit solution with β-mercaptoethanol, frozen at bedside in dry ice, and stored at –80°C. Nasal mucosal samples had >95% epithelial cells.
Evaluation of SLC26A4 mRNA in human nasal mucosal samples
After RNA isolation and cDNA synthesis, SLC26A4 mRNA was quantified using a validated two-step real-time PCR method (25). Primer and probe sequences have been previously reported (26).
In vitro infection of NHBE cells with rhinovirus
NHBE cells from normal individuals (Lonza, passages 1–4) were seeded onto 6.5-mm Transwell inserts (BD Biosciences) at 5 x 104 cells/insert and grown to 100% confluence and then cultured at air-liquid interface for 2 wk to promote epithelial differentiation. Rhinovirus serotype 16 (RV16) was grown in HeLa cells, purified by sucrose gradient, and quantified by a PFU assay using standard virological methods. NHBE cells were infected on the apical side with RV16 (multiplicity of infection of 5) for 6 h at 35°C with mild agitation at 2 rpm, after which virus was washed off with PBS and the cells were cultured for 24 h. Some cells were prestimulated with 10 ng/ml human IFN-
(R&D Systems) for 24 h before RV16 infection. Control cells received a sham inoculum. SLC26A4 mRNA expression was measured using the same primer and probe sequences used for analysis of the nasal mucosal samples, and changes in gene expression were calculated using the 2–
Ct method.
Statistical analyses
With the exception of the pendrin measurements from nasal epithelial cells from human subjects, data are presented as means ± SEM and significance testing was done using Students t test, Tukeys test, or Tukey-Kramers test after ANOVA, or Kruskal-Walliss test. p values <0.05 were considered significant. For comparing characteristics of asthmatic and nonasthmatic subjects, we used the Mann-Whitneys rank test for continuous variables or the Fisher exact test for categorical variables. Levels of SLC26A4 mRNA among the three visits were analyzed using generalized estimating equations (xtgee command of Stata). Pairwise comparisons between two visits were then analyzed using Wilcoxons signed-rank test. KaleidaGraph (ver. 3.6, Synergy Software) and Stata (Ver. 8, StataCorp) software packages were used for statistical analyses.
| Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Pendrin-deficient mice and control mice were sensitized and then challenged by intranasal administration of OVA to produce an allergic response in the lung and airway. Respiratory system resistance was measured in sedated and mechanically ventilated mice after i.v. administration of acetylcholine (Fig. 1a). OVA challenge increased airway reactivity in control mice, as expected. Airway hyperreactivity was also observed in OVA-challenged pendrin-deficient mice, but the degree of hyperreactivity was significantly less than in OVA-challenged control mice. There were no differences in airway reactivity to acetylcholine between saline-challenged control and saline-challenged pendrin-deficient mice. BAL fluid was collected to assess the effects of OVA sensitization and challenge on inflammatory cell recruitment (Fig. 1b). Cells retrieved from saline-challenged mice were mostly macrophages. There were large increases in macrophages, eosinophils, lymphocytes, and neutrophils in OVA-challenged control mice. Increases were also observed in OVA-challenged pendrin-deficient mice, but the numbers of total cells, eosinophils, and neutrophils were significantly less than in OVA-challenged control mice. Histological analysis revealed large numbers of inflammatory cells around the conducting airways in OVA-challenged control mice, but inflammation was significantly reduced in OVA-challenged pendrin-deficient mice (Fig. 1, c and d).
|
We measured OVA-specific IgE in serum to determine whether reduced airway hyperreactivity in pendrin-deficient mice might be explained by a generalized impairment in the allergic response. OVA challenge led to production of similar amounts of OVA-specific IgE in control and pendrin-deficient mice (Fig. 2a), indicating that this aspect of the allergic response was preserved. We also found that there was no difference in allergen-induced mucus metaplasia between control and pendrin-deficient mice (Fig. 2b). Since mucus metaplasia depends on Th2 cytokines, especially IL-13, this result indicates that Th2 responses were intact in pendrin-deficient mice. Analysis of expression of mRNAs encoding the Th2 cytokines IL-4, IL-5, and IL-13 and the Th1 cytokine IFN-
in lungs from OVA-challenged mice revealed no significant differences between control and pendrin-deficient mice (Fig. 2c).
|
Allergen challenge increased the pendrin transcript Slc26a4 (Fig. 3a), as we reported previously (26). We also investigated the expression of five other mRNAs encoding proteins involved in epithelial cell ion transport. Allergen challenge significantly reduced transcripts encoding all three ENaC subunits (Scnn1a, Scnn1b, and Scnn1g) and cftr (Fig. 3b). Allergen challenge also led to a large increase in expression of Clca3 mRNA, as previously reported (21). There were no significant differences in expression of the three ENaC transcripts, Cftr, or Clca3 between OVA-challenged control and OVA-challenged pendrin-deficient mice.
|
To identify effects of pendrin on ASL, we studied MTEC cultures from control and pendrin-deficient mice. Cells were cultured at air-liquid interface, a method that allows cells to differentiate, polarize, and form an ASL layer. We first investigated how IL-13 stimulation of MTEC affected expression of transcripts encoding proteins involved in ion transport. IL-13 markedly up-regulated Slc26a4 and Clca3 mRNAs in MTEC (Fig. 4a). We previously reported similar effects of IL-13 on the human orthologs of these mRNAs (SLC26A4 and CLCA1) in NHBE cells (31). Although Scnn1a expression was not affected by IL-13, Scnn1b and Scnn1g were both substantially decreased. Decreases in these 2 ENaC subunit mRNAs were substantially more marked than the decreases measured after in vivo allergen challenge (Fig. 4b). It is possible that the dose or duration of IL-13 stimulation used in the MTEC experiments accounts for this difference. Alternatively, since the whole lung samples analyzed in the allergen challenge model contain large numbers of ENaC-expressing alveolar epithelial cells (42), it seems likely the effects of IL-13 on Scnn1b and Scnn1g expression in airway epithelial cells were underestimated by the analysis of whole lung RNA. We did not identify any significant differences in expression of ENaC mRNAs, Cftr, or Clca3 between IL-13-stimulated control MTEC and IL-13-stimulated pendrin-deficient MTEC (Fig. 4b). Mucin 5 subtypes a and c (Muc5ac) expression was similar in control and pendrin-deficient MTECs (data not shown).
|
We measured ASL thickness of control and pendrin-deficient MTEC cultures stimulated with or without IL-13 using a confocal microscope. Typical z-axis fluorescence traces obtained from cultures of unstimulated and IL-13-stimulated control MTEC cells are shown in Fig. 5a. In the absence of IL-13, there was no significant difference in ASL thickness between control and pendrin-deficient MTEC cultures (Fig. 5b). IL-13 stimulation increased ASL thickness in both control and pendrin-deficient MTEC cultures. ASL in IL-13-stimulated pendrin-deficient MTEC cultures was significantly thicker than that in IL-13-stimulated control MTEC cultures, indicating that the effect of IL-13 on ASL was exaggerated in pendrin-deficient MTEC cultures.
|
Nasal mucosa samples were collected from asthmatic and nonasthmatic human subjects at three time points after onset of cold symptoms. Samples from 22 subjects with confirmed rhinovirus infection were analyzed for this study. The characteristics of the subjects are shown in Table I. There were no obvious differences between nonasthmatic and asthmatic subjects or between nonatopic and atopic subjects, but there were relatively small numbers of subjects in these subgroups. When data from all 22 subjects were analyzed together (Fig. 6a), we found that SLC26A4 mRNA expression was significantly increased during acute colds (at visit 1, 1–3 d after onset of symptoms and at visit 2, 5–7 d after onset of symptoms) compared with a time long after resolution of symptoms (visit 3,
42 d after onset of symptoms). Mean SLC26A4 expression was 4.9-fold higher at visit 1 and 2.2-fold higher at visit 2 compared with visit 3.
|
|
increases SLC26A4 mRNA in NHBE cells
To determine whether rhinovirus directly increases SLC26A4 mRNA expression in human airway epithelial cells, we infected NHBE cells with RV16 in vitro. Under the conditions we used, RV16 infection alone had no effect on SLC26A4 mRNA expression (Fig. 6b). We considered the possibility that cytokines produced by other cells during rhinovirus infection contribute to SLC26A4 mRNA induction in vivo. Rhinovirus stimulates production of IFN-
by mononuclear cells (8, 43, 44, 45), and we found that many genes known to be induced by IFN-
were markedly up-regulated in nasal epithelial cells during common colds (S. Favoreto, H. Boushey, and P. Avila, unpublished data). IFN-
alone had a small but nonsignificant effect on SLC26A4 mRNA expression. However, the combination of RV16 infection and IFN-
stimulation caused a larger and statistically significant effect on SLC26A4 expression in NHBE cells.
| Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Allergen-induced airway hyperreactivity and inflammation were reduced in pendrin-deficient mice. These effects cannot be explained by a generalized defect in the allergic response, since production of OVA-specific IgE, mucus, and Th2 cytokine mRNAs was unaffected by pendrin deficiency. Instead, it seems likely that pendrin deficiency affects hyperreactivity and inflammation due to its effects on ASL. A causal association between ASL dehydration and airway inflammation and obstruction has been established in cystic fibrosis (16) and in transgenic mice overexpressing ENaC (17). In allergic airway disease, IL-13 stimulation causes increased production of mucus (11) along with increased secretion of ions and water (18). We found that pendrin-deficient MTEC cultures were better hydrated (had thicker ASL) than control cells following IL-13 stimulation, and this may facilitate mucus clearance and improve airway function. Mechanistic relationships between ASL hydration, airway inflammation, and airway obstruction and hyperreactivity are complex and incompletely understood despite extensive analysis of various asthma and cystic fibrosis models. It is clear that airway epithelial cells can affect inflammation by producing cytokines that affect maturation and recruitment of eosinophils and other leukocytes (46). We examined expression of mRNAs encoding cytokines that are induced in the allergic model and are known to play a role in eosinophil recruitment, including IL-5 (Fig. 2c) and the chemokines CCL2 (MCP-1), CCL11 (eotaxin-1), and CCL24 (eotaxin-2) (data not shown), but found no differences in pendrin-deficient mice. We cannot formally exclude the possibility that other pendrin-expressing cells in the lung are involved in allergic airway disease, but we are not aware of reports of pendrin expression in cells other than epithelial cells and we detected minimal if any Slc26a4 mRNA in BAL fluid inflammatory cells (data not shown). Our findings are consistent with the hypothesis that pendrins effects on inflammation and airway reactivity are due to direct effects on ASL, although other explanations for these effects cannot be excluded.
Nakao and colleagues have very recently described the results of other, complementary approaches to studying the role of pendrin in airway disease (33). These investigators found that forced expression of pendrin using a Sendai virus vector led to increased expression of mucus. We found no effect of pendrin deficiency on levels of mucus in response to allergen challenge using a highly quantitative stereology-based approach, indicating that pendrin expression is not required for allergen-induced mucus production in this model. Similar results were reported in studies of another allergen-induced epithelial cell gene, Clca3 (Gob-5): overexpression led to increased mucus production (21, 24), but gene deletion had no effect on mucus production in response to allergen challenge (22, 24). This may be explained by the existence of redundant pathways leading to mucus production (24). Nakao and colleagues also found that forced expression of pendrin caused airway inflammation and hyperreactivity (33). Our findings of decreased inflammation and hyperreactivity in allergen-challenged pendrin-deficient mice provide additional evidence for the involvement of pendrin in these processes and show that pathological responses to allergen are diminished when pendrin is absent.
We found that pendrin deficiency affected ASL in a manner consistent with what is known about pendrin function outside the lung. Heterologous expression of pendrin in Xenopus oocytes (47), Sf9 insect cells (47), HEK-293 kidney cells (48), and Fischer rat thyroid cells (32) has been shown to increase transport of chloride and other ions. Studies of pendrin-deficient mice established that pendrin contributes to absorption of chloride and water in the ear and the kidney. In the inner ear, pendrin is expressed at high levels and deficiency of pendrin results in impaired chloride and water uptake from endolymph (30). In the kidney, pendrin has no detectable effects on renal function or fluid or electrolyte balance under normal conditions (49). However, mineralocorticoid administration results in a substantial increase in pendrin expression by cortical collecting duct cells (50). Mineralocorticoids caused hypertension and weight gain in wild-type mice but not in pendrin-deficient mice, indicating that mineralocorticoid-induced pendrin expression leads to increased chloride and water absorption in the kidney (50). Similarly, we found that the effect of pendrin on ASL thickness in MTEC cultures was only apparent after stimulation with IL-13, which substantially increased pendrin expression. IL-13 increased ASL thickness in both control and pendrin-deficient MTEC cultures, likely due to multiple effects on expression of ion transporters including reduced expression of ENaC. The increase in ASL was significantly larger in pendrin-deficient MTEC cultures, which is consistent with the hypothesis that pendrin, which localizes to the apical membrane of airway epithelial cells (33), increases total chloride uptake and water absorption in these cells. However, other direct or indirect effects of pendrin on absorption or secretion of ions and water might also account for our findings. In any case, our findings demonstrate that pendrin expression has a significant effect on ASL thickness after IL-13 stimulation.
We found that naturally occurring colds caused by rhinovirus, a very common trigger of exacerbations, were associated with increased expression of SLC26A4. Our in vitro studies of NHBE cells indicate that the combination of direct effects of rhinovirus on NHBE cells and indirect effects mediated by IFN-
, a cytokine produced by leukocytes during rhinovirus infections, could account for this increase. Additionally, the present study confirms that allergen, another trigger of asthma exacerbations, increases Slc26a4 mRNA expression in mice. We have also reported that lung expression of Slc26a4 is increased in mouse models of bacterial infection (51), where the recently reported (32) ability of pendrin to secrete thiocyanate, an anion with a role in antimicrobial defense, may be important. These results suggest that increases in pendrin expression could contribute to inflammation and airway dysfunction in viral infections, thought to be the predominant cause of asthma exacerbations, as well as in bacterial infections and allergen-induced exacerbations. We previously reported that bronchial epithelial expression of SLC26A4 was not increased in human subjects with stable, mild to moderate asthma compared with healthy, nonasthmatic controls (26). This suggests that pendrin plays a more important role in airway dysfunction during asthma exacerbations than during stable asthma.
Inhibition of pendrin could be an effective strategy for treatment of asthma exacerbations. General evidence in support of strategies designed to augment ASL comes from a recent demonstration that inhalation of hypertonic saline had beneficial effects in cystic fibrosis (52). Pendrin is one of several molecules that regulate ASL and represent possible therapeutic targets in asthma and other airway diseases. For treatment of cystic fibrosis and chronic bronchitis, considerable efforts have been made to develop therapies designed to increase ASL by inhibiting ENaC (53) or stimulating Cl– channels (54), although these compounds have not yet succeeded in clinical trials (13). Niflumic acid, an inhibitor of calcium-activated chloride channels, had beneficial effects in both allergic (55) and IL-13-induced (56) models of asthma, but it is not yet clear whether effects of niflumic acid are due to inhibition of chloride channels or other effects of this drug (23). Pendrin presents a potential alternative therapeutic target for asthma exacerbations. Inhibition of pendrin in the ear, kidney, or thyroid might have undesirable effects, but these could likely be minimized by delivering aerosolized drug directly to the airway. Since pendrin is involved in thiocyanate secretion (32), it will also be important to examine whether pendrin inhibition impairs host defense. The results reported herein provide a basis for future studies aimed at developing and testing pendrin inhibitors for use in asthma exacerbations.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
| Disclosures |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
1 This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants HL085089 and AI50496, the University of California Sandler Asthma Basic Research Center, and the Ernest S. Bazley Grant to Northwestern University. ![]()
2 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. David Erle, University of California Mail Code 2922, 1550 4th Street, San Francisco, CA 94158. E-mail address: david.erle{at}ucsf.edu ![]()
3 Abbreviations used in this paper: ASL, airway surface liquid; BAL, bronchoalveolar lavage; Cftr, cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator; CLCA1, chloride channel calcium activated 1; Ct, threshold cycle; ENaC, epithelial sodium channel; MTEC, mouse tracheal epithelial cells; NHBE, normal human bronchial epithelial; RV16, rhinovirus serotype 16; Scnn1a, sodium channel, nonvoltage-gated, type I,
; Slc26a4, solute carrier family 26 member 4. ![]()
Received for publication February 28, 2008. Accepted for publication June 3, 2008.
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|

C(T)) method. Methods 25: 402-408. [Medline]
enhances rhinovirus-induced RANTES secretion by airway epithelial cells. Am. J. Respir. 26: 594-601.
and airway responsiveness in asthma. Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. 168: 1091-1094. This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
S.-W. Park, C. Verhaeghe, L. T. Nguyenvu, R. Barbeau, C. J. Eisley, Y. Nakagami, X. Huang, P. G. Woodruff, J. V. Fahy, and D. J. Erle Distinct Roles of FOXA2 and FOXA3 in Allergic Airway Disease and Asthma Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med., October 1, 2009; 180(7): 603 - 610. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
A C Madeo, A Manichaikul, S P Pryor, and A J Griffith Do mutations of the Pendred syndrome gene, SLC26A4, confer resistance to asthma and hypertension? J. Med. Genet., June 1, 2009; 46(6): 405 - 406. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |