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Cigarette smoke-initiated autoimmunity facilitates sensitisation to elastin-induced COPD-like pathologies in mice

Authors :
Hai Pin Chen
Wen Li
Min Zhang
Mary E. Choi
Songmin Ying
Nan Xia Xuan
Yanping Wu
Ling Ling Dong
Hui Ping Li
Juan Liu
Martin R. Stämpfli
Jie Sen Zhou
Hui Qiu
Lie Wang
Hua Qiong Huang
Yi Wang
Dong Weng
Wei Ning Xiong
Xiaobo Zhou
Xu Chen Xu
Zhihua Chen
Yin Fang Wu
Wen Hua
Tao Chen
Fang Liu
Chen Zhu
Yun Zhao
Mitsuru Imamura
Xin Lin
Augustine M.K. Choi
Fu Gui Yan
Chun Hong Di
Zhou-Yang Li
Yong Wang
Tianwen Lai
Huahao Shen
Source :
The European respiratory journal. 56(3)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

It is currently not understood whether cigarette smoke exposure facilitates sensitisation to self-antigens and whether ensuing auto-reactive T cells drive chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)-associated pathologies.To address this question, mice were exposed to cigarette smoke for 2 weeks. Following a 2-week period of rest, mice were challenged intratracheally with elastin for 3 days or 1 month. Rag1−/−, Mmp12−/−, and Il17a−/− mice and neutralising antibodies against active elastin fragments were used for mechanistic investigations. Human GVAPGVGVAPGV/HLA-A*02:01 tetramer was synthesised to assess the presence of elastin-specific T cells in patients with COPD.We observed that 2 weeks of cigarette smoke exposure induced an elastin-specific T cell response that led to neutrophilic airway inflammation and mucus hyperproduction following elastin recall challenge. Repeated elastin challenge for 1 month resulted in airway remodelling, lung function decline and airspace enlargement. Elastin-specific T cell recall responses were dose dependent and memory lasted for over 6 months. Adoptive T cell transfer and studies in T cells deficient Rag1−/−mice conclusively implicated T cells in these processes. Mechanistically, cigarette smoke exposure-induced elastin-specific T cell responses were matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)12-dependent, while the ensuing immune inflammatory processes were interleukin 17A-driven. Anti-elastin antibodies and T cells specific for elastin peptides were increased in patients with COPD.These data demonstrate that MMP12-generated elastin fragments serve as a self-antigen and drive the cigarette smoke-induced autoimmune processes in mice that result in a bronchitis-like phenotype and airspace enlargement. The study provides proof of concept of cigarette smoke-induced autoimmune processes and may serve as a novel mouse model of COPD.

Details

ISSN :
13993003
Volume :
56
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The European respiratory journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....377a466d08f2cbb73716ff2e1c465422