Nlrp9b inflammasome restricts rotavirus infection in intestinal epithelial cells.
Rotavirus,a leading cause of severe gastroenteritis and diarrhoea in young children,accounts for around 215,000 deaths annually worldwide. Rotavirus specifically infects the intestinal epithelial cells in the host small intestine and has evolved strategies to antagonize interferon and NF-κB signalling,raising the question as to whether other host factors participate in antiviral responses in intestinal mucosa. The mechanism by which enteric viruses are sensed and restricted in vivo,especially by NOD-like receptor (NLR) inflammasomes,is largely unknown. Here we uncover and mechanistically characterize the NLR Nlrp9b that is specifically expressed in intestinal epithelial cells and restricts rotavirus infection. Our data show that,via RNA helicase Dhx9,Nlrp9b recognizes short double-stranded RNA stretches and forms inflammasome complexes with the adaptor proteins Asc and caspase-1 to promote the maturation of interleukin (Il)-18 and gasdermin D (Gsdmd)-induced pyroptosis. Conditional depletion of Nlrp9b or other inflammasome components in the intestine in vivo resulted in enhanced susceptibility of mice to rotavirus replication. Our study highlights an important innate immune signalling pathway that functions in intestinal epithelial cells and may present useful targets in the modulation of host defences against viral pathogens.
View Publication
文献
W. Zhou et al. (SEP 2018)
Journal of cellular physiology 233 4 3465--3475
Glucose stimulates intestinal epithelial crypt proliferation by modulating cellular energy metabolism.
The intestinal epithelium plays an essential role in nutrient absorption,hormone release,and barrier function. Maintenance of the epithelium is driven by continuous cell renewal by stem cells located in the intestinal crypts. The amount and type of diet influence this process and result in changes in the size and cellular make-up of the tissue. The mechanism underlying the nutrient-driven changes in proliferation is not known,but may involve a shift in intracellular metabolism that allows for more nutrients to be used to manufacture new cells. We hypothesized that nutrient availability drives changes in cellular energy metabolism of small intestinal epithelial crypts that could contribute to increases in crypt proliferation. We utilized primary small intestinal epithelial crypts from C57BL/6J mice to study (1) the effect of glucose on crypt proliferation and (2) the effect of glucose on crypt metabolism using an extracellular flux analyzer for real-time metabolic measurements. We found that glucose increased both crypt proliferation and glycolysis,and the glycolytic pathway inhibitor 2-deoxy-d-glucose (2-DG) attenuated glucose-induced crypt proliferation. Glucose did not enhance glucose oxidation,but did increase the maximum mitochondrial respiratory capacity,which may contribute to glucose-induced increases in proliferation. Glucose activated Akt/HIF-1alpha signaling pathway,which might be at least in part responsible for glucose-induced glycolysis and cell proliferation. These results suggest that high glucose availability induces an increase in crypt proliferation by inducing an increase in glycolysis with no change in glucose oxidation.
View Publication
文献
Zhou T et al. (JUL 2017)
Cell stem cell
High-Content Screening in hPSC-Neural Progenitors Identifies Drug Candidates that Inhibit Zika Virus Infection in Fetal-like Organoids and Adult Brain.
Zika virus (ZIKV) infects fetal and adult human brain and is associated with serious neurological complications. To date,no therapeutic treatment is available to treat ZIKV-infected patients. We performed a high-content chemical screen using human pluripotent stem cell-derived cortical neural progenitor cells (hNPCs) and found that hippeastrine hydrobromide (HH) and amodiaquine dihydrochloride dihydrate (AQ) can inhibit ZIKV infection in hNPCs. Further validation showed that HH also rescues ZIKV-induced growth and differentiation defects in hNPCs and human fetal-like forebrain organoids. Finally,HH and AQ inhibit ZIKV infection in adult mouse brain in vivo. Strikingly,HH suppresses viral propagation when administered to adult mice with active ZIKV infection,highlighting its therapeutic potential. Our approach highlights the power of stem cell-based screens and validation in human forebrain organoids and mouse models in identifying drug candidates for treating ZIKV infection and related neurological complications in fetal and adult patients.
View Publication
文献
Yu Z et al. ( 2017)
Toxicology in Vitro 42 April 319--328
Prediction of delivery of organic aerosols onto air-liquid interface cells in vitro using an electrostatic precipitator
To better characterize biological responses to atmospheric organic aerosols,the efficient delivery of aerosol to in vitro lung cells is necessary. In this study,chamber generated secondary organic aerosol (SOA) entered the commercialized exposure chamber (CULTEX® Radial Flow System Compact) where it interfaced with an electrostatic precipitator (ESP) (CULTEX® Electrical Deposition Device) and then deposited on a particle collection plate. This plate contained human lung cells (BEAS-2B) that were cultured on a membrane insert to produce an air-liquid interface (ALI). To augment in vitro assessment using the ESP exposure device,the particle dose was predicted for various sampling parameters such as particle size,ESP deposition voltage,and sampling flowrate. The dose model was evaluated against the experimental measured mass of collected airborne particles. The high flowrate used in this study increased aerosol dose but failed to achieve cell stability. For example,RNA in the ALI BEAS-2B cells in vitro was stable at 0.15 L/minute but decayed at high flowrates. The ESP device and the resulting model were applied to in vitro studies (i.e.,viability and IL-8 expression) of toluene SOA using ALI BEAS-2B cells with a flowrate of 0.15 L/minute,and no cellular RNA decay occurred.
View Publication
文献
Yonker LM et al. ( 2017)
The Journal of Immunology 199 8 2873--2884
Neutrophil-derived cytosolic PLA2α contributes to bacterial-induced neutrophil transepithelial migration
Eicosanoids are a group of bioactive lipids that are shown to be important mediators of neutrophilic inflammation; selective targeting of their function confers therapeutic benefit in a number of diseases. Neutrophilic airway diseases,including cystic fibrosis,are characterized by excessive neutrophil infiltration into the airspace. Understanding the role of eicosanoids in this process may reveal novel therapeutic targets. The eicosanoid hepoxilin A3 is a pathogen-elicited epithelial-produced neutrophil chemoattractant that directs transepithelial migration in response to infection. Following hepoxilin A3-driven transepithelial migration,neutrophil chemotaxis is amplified through neutrophil production of a second eicosanoid,leukotriene B4 (LTB4). The rate-limiting step of eicosanoid generation is the liberation of arachidonic acid by phospholipase A2,and the cytosolic phospholipase A2 (cPLA2)α isoform has been specifically shown to direct LTB4 synthesis in certain contexts. Whether cPLA2α is directly responsible for neutrophil synthesis of LTB4 in the context of Pseudomonas aeruginosa-induced neutrophil transepithelial migration has not been explored. Human and mouse neutrophil-epithelial cocultures were used to evaluate the role of neutrophil-derived cPLA2α in infection-induced transepithelial signaling by pharmacological and genetic approaches. Primary human airway basal stem cell-derived epithelial cultures and micro-optical coherence tomography,a new imaging modality that captures two- and three-dimensional real-time dynamics of neutrophil transepithelial migration,were applied. Evidence from these studies suggests that cPLA2α expressed by neutrophils,but not epithelial cells,plays a significant role in infection-induced neutrophil transepithelial migration by mediating LTB4 synthesis during migration,which serves to amplify the magnitude of neutrophil recruitment in response to epithelial infection.
View Publication
Development of a primary human co-culture model of inflamed airway mucosa
Neutrophil breach of the mucosal surface is a common pathological consequence of infection. We present an advanced co-culture model to explore neutrophil transepithelial migration utilizing airway mucosal barriers differentiated from primary human airway basal cells and examined by advanced imaging. Human airway basal cells were differentiated and cultured at air-liquid interface (ALI) on the underside of 3 μm pore-sized transwells,compatible with the study of transmigrating neutrophils. Inverted ALIs exhibit beating cilia and mucus production,consistent with conventional ALIs,as visualized by micro-optical coherence tomography (μOCT). μOCT is a recently developed imaging modality with the capacity for real time two- A nd three-dimensional analysis of cellular events in marked detail,including neutrophil transmigratory dynamics. Further,the newly devised and imaged primary co-culture model recapitulates key molecular mechanisms that underlie bacteria-induced neutrophil transepithelial migration previously characterized using cell line-based models. Neutrophils respond to imposed chemotactic gradients,and migrate in response to Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection of primary ALI barriers through a hepoxilin A3-directed mechanism. This primary cell-based co-culture system combined with μOCT imaging offers significant opportunity to probe,in great detail,micro-anatomical and mechanistic features of bacteria-induced neutrophil transepithelial migration and other important immunological and physiological processes at the mucosal surface.
View Publication
文献
Yan Z et al. (AUG 2017)
Human gene therapy 28 8 612--625
Human Bocavirus Type-1 Capsid Facilitates the Transduction of Ferret Airways by Adeno-Associated Virus Genomes.
Human bocavirus type-1 (HBoV1) has a high tropism for the apical membrane of human airway epithelia. The packaging of a recombinant adeno-associated virus 2 (rAAV2) genome into HBoV1 capsid produces a chimeric vector (rAAV2/HBoV1) that also efficiently transduces human airway epithelia. As such,this vector is attractive for use in gene therapies to treat lung diseases such as cystic fibrosis. However,preclinical development of rAAV2/HBoV1 vectors has been hindered by the fact that humans are the only known host for HBoV1 infection. This study reports that rAAV2/HBoV1 vector is capable of efficiently transducing the lungs of both newborn (3- to 7-day-old) and juvenile (29-day-old) ferrets,predominantly in the distal airways. Analyses of in vivo,ex vivo,and in vitro models of the ferret proximal airway demonstrate that infection of this particular region is less effective than it is in humans. Studies of vector binding and endocytosis in polarized ferret proximal airway epithelial cultures revealed that a lack of effective vector endocytosis is the main cause of inefficient transduction in vitro. While transgene expression declined proportionally with growth of the ferrets following infection at 7 days of age,reinfection of ferrets with rAAV2/HBoV1 at 29 days gave rise to approximately 5-fold higher levels of transduction than observed in naive infected 29-day-old animals. The findings presented here lay the foundation for clinical development of HBoV1 capsid-based vectors for lung gene therapy in cystic fibrosis using ferret models.
View Publication
文献
Wu Q et al. (NOV 2017)
American journal of physiology. Lung cellular and molecular physiology 30-Nov ajplung003242017
Over-production of growth differentiation factor 15 (GDF15) promotes human rhinovirus infection and virus-induced inflammation in the lung.
Human rhinovirus (HRV) is the most common virus contributing to acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) nearly year-round,but the mechanisms have not been well elucidated. Recent clinical studies suggest that high levels of growth differentiation factor 15 (GDF15) protein in the blood are associated with an increased yearly rate of all-cause COPD exacerbations. Therefore,in the current study,we investigated whether GDF15 promotes HRV infection and virus-induced lung inflammation. We first examined the role of GDF15 in regulating host defense and HRV-induced inflammation using human GDF15 transgenic mice and cultured human GDF15 transgenic mouse tracheal epithelial cells. Next,we determined the effect of GDF15 on viral replication,antiviral responses,and inflammation in human airway epithelial cells with GDF15 knockdown and HRV infection. Finally,we explored the signaling pathways involved in airway epithelial responses to HRV infection in the context of GDF15. Human GDF15 protein over-expression in mice led to exaggerated inflammatory responses to HRV,increased infectious particle release,and decreased IFN-λ2/3 (IL-28A/B) mRNA expression in the lung. Moreover,GDF15 facilitated HRV replication and inflammation via inhibiting IFN-λ1/IL-29 protein production in human airway epithelial cells. Lastly,Smad1 cooperated with interferon regulatory factor 7 (IRF7) to regulate airway epithelial responses to HRV infection partly via GDF15 signaling. Our results reveal a novel function of GDF15 in promoting lung HRV infection and virus-induced inflammation,which may be a new mechanism for the increased susceptibility and severity of respiratory viral (i.e.,HRV) infection in cigarette smoke-exposed airways with GDF15 over-production.
View Publication
文献
Tan Q et al. ( 2017)
Biomaterials 113 118--132
Human airway organoid engineering as a step toward lung regeneration and disease modeling
Organoids represent both a potentially powerful tool for the study cell-cell interactions within tissue-like environments,and a platform for tissue regenerative approaches. The development of lung tissue-like organoids from human adult-derived cells has not previously been reported. Here we combined human adult primary bronchial epithelial cells,lung fibroblasts,and lung microvascular endothelial cells in supportive 3D culture conditions to generate airway organoids. We demonstrate that randomly-seeded mixed cell populations undergo rapid condensation and self-organization into discrete epithelial and endothelial structures that are mechanically robust and stable during long term culture. After condensation airway organoids generate invasive multicellular tubular structures that recapitulate limited aspects of branching morphogenesis,and require actomyosin-mediated force generation and YAP/TAZ activation. Despite the proximal source of primary epithelium used in the airway organoids,discrete areas of both proximal and distal epithelial markers were observed over time in culture,demonstrating remarkable epithelial plasticity within the context of organoid cultures. Airway organoids also exhibited complex multicellular responses to a prototypical fibrogenic stimulus (TGF-??1) in culture,and limited capacity to undergo continued maturation and engraftment after ectopic implantation under the murine kidney capsule. These results demonstrate that the airway organoid system developed here represents a novel tool for the study of disease-relevant cell-cell interactions,and establishes this platform as a first step toward cell-based therapy for chronic lung diseases based on de novo engineering of implantable airway tissues.
View Publication
文献
Stevenson C et al. (AUG 2017)
Inflammation research : official journal of the European Histamine Research Society ... [et al.] 66 8 691--700
OBJECTIVE To evaluate the effects of MUC18 on IL-13-mediated airway inflammatory responses in human airway epithelial cells and in mice. MATERIALS Primary normal human tracheobronchial epithelial (HTBE) cells,wild-type (WT) and Muc18 knockout (KO) mice,and mouse tracheal epithelial cells (mTECs) were utilized. TREATMENT Cultured HTBE cells treated with MUC18 siRNA or MUC18 expressing lentivirus were incubated with IL-13 (10 ng/mL) for 24 h. Mice were intranasally instilled with 500 ng of IL-13 for 3 days. mTECs were treated with IL-13 (10 ng/mL) for 3 days. METHODS PCR was used to measure mRNA expression. Western Blot and ELISAs were used to quantify protein expression. Cytospins of bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) cells were used to obtain leukocyte differentials. RESULTS MUC18 siRNA reduced IL-13-mediated eotaxin-3 (183 ± 44 vs. 380 ± 59 pg/mL,p < 0.05),while MUC18 overexpression increased IL-13-mediated eotaxin-3 (95 ± 3 vs. 58 ± 3 pg/mL,p < 0.05) in HTBE cells. IL-13-treated Muc18 KO mice had a lower percentage of neutrophils in BAL than WT mice (25 ± 3 vs. 35 ± 3%,p = 0.0565). CONCLUSIONS These results implicate MUC18 as a potential enhancer of airway inflammation in a type 2 cytokine (e.g.,IL-13) milieu.
View Publication
文献
Speen AM et al. ( 2016)
Journal of Biological Chemistry 291 48 25192--25206
Ozone-derived oxysterols affect liver X receptor (LXR) signaling: A potential role for lipid-protein adducts
When inhaled,ozone (O3) interacts with cholesterols of airway epithelial cell membranes or the lung lining fluid,generating chemically reactive oxysterols. The mechanism by which O3-derived oxysterols affect molecular function is unknown. Our data show that in vitro exposure of human bronchial epithelial cells to O3 results in the formation of oxysterols,epoxycholesterol-α and β (α-EpCh,β-EpCh) and Secosterol A and B (Seco A,SecoB),in cell lysates and apical washes. Similarly,bronchoalveolar lavage fluid obtained from human volunteers exposed to O3 contained elevated levels of these oxysterol species. As expected,O3-derived oxysterols have a pro-inflammatory effect and increase NF-κB activity. Interestingly,expression of the cholesterol efflux pump ATP-binding cassette transporter 1 (ABCA1),which is regulated by activation of the liver X receptor (LXR),was suppressed in epithelial cells exposed to O3. Additionally,exposure of LXR knockout mice to O3 enhanced pro-inflammatory cytokine production in the lung,suggesting LXR inhibits O3-induced inflammation. Using alkynyl surrogates of O3-derived oxysterols,our data demonstrate adduction of LXR with Seco A. Similarly,supplementation of epithelial cells with alkynyl-tagged cholesterol followed by O3 exposure causes observable lipid-LXR adduct formation. Experiments using Seco A and the LXR agonist T0901317 (T09) showed reduced expression of ABCA1 as compared to stimulation with T09 alone,indicating that Seco A-LXR protein adduct formation inhibits LXR activation by traditional agonists. Overall,these data demonstrate that O3-derived oxysterols have pro-inflammatory functions and form lipid-protein adducts with LXR,thus leading to suppressed cholesterol regulatory gene expression and providing a biochemical mechanism mediating O3-derived formation of oxidized lipids in the airways and subsequent adverse health effects.
View Publication
文献
Solleti SK et al. ( 2017)
Scientific Reports 7 1 1--10
MicroRNA expression profiling defines the impact of electronic cigarettes on human airway epithelial cells
While all forms of tobacco exposure have negative health effects,the significance of exposure to electronic cigarettes (eCig) is not fully understood. Here,we studied the global effects of eCig on the micro RNA (miRNA) transcriptome in human lung epithelial cells. Primary human bronchial epithelial (NHBE) cells differentiated at air-liquid interface were exposed to eCig liquid. Exposure of NHBE to any eCig liquid resulted in the induction of oxidative stress-response genes including GCLM,GCLC,GPX2,NQO1 and HO-1. Vaporization of,and/or the presence of nicotine in,eCig liquid was associated with a greater response. We identified 578 miRNAs dysregulated by eCig exposure in NHBE,and 125 miRNA affected by vaporization of eCig liquid. Nicotine containing eCig vapor displayed the most profound effects upon miRNA expression. We selected 8 miRNAs (29A,140,126,374A,26A-2,147B,941 and 589) for further study. We validated increased expression of multiple miRNAs,including miR126,following eCig exposure. We also found significant reduction in the expression of two miR126 target genes,MYC and MRGPRX3,following exposure. These data demonstrated that eCig exposure has profound effects upon gene expression in human lung epithelial cells,some of which are epigenetically programmed at the level of miRNA regulation.
View Publication