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Epithelium-derived IL17A Promotes Cigarette Smoke--induced Inflammation and Mucus Hyperproduction.

Authors :
Mindan Wu
Tianwen Lai
Du Jing
Shiyi Yang
Yanping Wu
Zhouyang Li
Yinfang Wu
Yun Zhao
Lingren Zhou
Haipin Chen
Jiaxin Shen
Wen Li
Songmin Ying
Zhihua Chen
Xiaohong Wu
Huahao Shen
Source :
American Journal of Respiratory Cell & Molecular Biology; Dec2021, Vol. 65 Issue 6, p581-592, 12p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The airway epithelium is a central modulator of innate and adaptive immunity in the lung. IL17A expression was found to be increased in the airway epithelium; however, the role of epithelium-derived IL17A in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) remains unclear. In this study, we aimed to determine whether epithelium-derived IL17A regulates inflammation and mucus hyperproduction in COPD by using a cultured human bronchial epithelial (HBE) cell line in vitro and an airway epithelium IL17A--specific knockout mouse in vivo. Increased IL17A expression was observed in the mouse airway epithelium upon cigarette smoke (CS) exposure or in a mouse model of COPD that was induced by using CS and Eln (elastin). CS extract (CSE) also triggered IL17A expression in HBE cells. Blocking IL17A or IL17RA (IL17 receptor A) effectively attenuated CSEinduced MUC5AC and the inflammatory cytokines IL6, TNF-a, and IL1b in HBE cells, suggesting that IL17A mediates CSE-induced inflammation and mucin production in an autocrine manner. CSE activated p-JUN (phospho-JUN) and p-JNK (phospho--c-Jun N-terminal kinase), which were also reduced by IL17RA siRNA, and JUN siRNA attenuated CSE-induced IL6 and MUC5AC. In vivo, selective knockout of IL17A in the airway epithelium markedly reduced the neutrophilic infiltration in BAL fluid, peribronchial inflammation, proinflammatory mediators (CXCL1 [CXC ligand 1] and CXCL2), and mucus production in a COPD mouse model. We showed a novel function of airway epithelium--derived IL17A, which can act locally in an autocrine manner to amplify inflammation and increase mucus production in COPD pathogenesis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10441549
Volume :
65
Issue :
6
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
American Journal of Respiratory Cell & Molecular Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
173420501
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1165/rcmb.2020-0424OC