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result(s) for
"Charbit, Annabelle R."
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Cellular and molecular features of asthma mucus plugs provide clues about their formation and persistence
2025
BACKGROUNDMucus plugs form in acute asthma and persist in chronic disease. Although eosinophils are implicated in mechanisms of mucus pathology, many mechanistic details about mucus plug formation and persistence in asthma are unknown.METHODSUsing histology and spatial, single-cell proteomics, we characterized mucus-plugged airways from nontransplantable donor lungs of 14 patients with asthma (9 with fatal asthma and 5 with nonfatal asthma) and individuals acting as controls (10 with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and 14 free of lung disease). Additionally, we used an airway epithelial cell-eosinophil (AEC-eosinophil) coculture model to explore how AEC mucus affects eosinophil degranulation.RESULTSAsthma mucus plugs were tethered to airways showing infiltration with innate lymphoid type 2 cells and hyperplasia of smooth muscle cells and MUC5AC-expressing goblet cells. Asthma mucus plugs were infiltrated with immune cells that were mostly dual positive for eosinophil peroxidase (EPX) and neutrophil elastase, suggesting that neutrophils internalize EPX from degranulating eosinophils. Indeed, eosinophils exposed to mucus from IL-13-activated AECs underwent CD11b- and glycan-dependent cytolytic degranulation. Dual-positive granulocytes varied in frequency in mucus plugs. Whereas paucigranulocytic plugs were MUC5AC rich, granulocytic plugs had a mix of MUC5AC, MUC5B, and extracellular DNA traps. Paucigranulocytic plugs occurred more frequently in (acute) fatal asthma and granulocytic plugs predominated in (chronic) nonfatal asthma.CONCLUSIONTogether, our data suggest that mucin-rich mucus plugs in fatal asthma form because of acute goblet cell degranulation in remodeled airways and that granulocytic mucus plugs in chronic asthma persist because of a sustaining niche characterized by epithelial cell-mucin-granulocyte cross-talk.FUNDINGNIH grants HL080414, HL107202, and AI077439.
Journal Article
Peroxidase-mediated mucin cross-linking drives pathologic mucus gel formation in IL-13–stimulated airway epithelial cells
by
Liegeois, Maude A.
,
Charbit, Annabelle R.
,
Wenzel, Sally E.
in
Animal models
,
Asthma
,
Asthma - metabolism
2024
Mucus plugs occlude airways to obstruct airflow in asthma. Studies in patients and in mouse models show that mucus plugs occur in the context of type 2 inflammation, and studies in human airway epithelial cells (HAECs) show that IL-13–activated cells generate pathologic mucus independently of immune cells. To determine how HAECs autonomously generate pathologic mucus, we used a magnetic microwire rheometer to characterize the viscoelastic properties of mucus secreted under varying conditions. We found that normal HAEC mucus exhibited viscoelastic liquid behavior and that mucus secreted by IL-13–activated HAECs exhibited solid-like behavior caused by mucin cross-linking. In addition, IL-13–activated HAECs shows increased peroxidase activity in apical secretions, and an overlaid thiolated polymer (thiomer) solution shows an increase in solid behavior that was prevented by peroxidase inhibition. Furthermore, gene expression for thyroid peroxidase (TPO), but not lactoperoxidase (LPO), was increased in IL-13–activated HAECs and both TPO and LPO catalyze the formation of oxidant acids that cross-link thiomer solutions. Finally, gene expression for TPO in airway epithelial brushings was increased in patients with asthma with high airway mucus plug scores. Together, our results show that IL-13–activated HAECs autonomously generated pathologic mucus via peroxidase-mediated cross-linking of mucin polymers.
Journal Article
Extracellular DNA, Neutrophil Extracellular Traps, and Inflammasome Activation in Severe Asthma
by
Lachowicz-Scroggins, Marrah E.
,
Charbit, Annabelle R.
,
Wenzel, Sally E.
in
Acute Disease
,
Adult
,
Asthma
2019
Extracellular DNA (eDNA) and neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) are implicated in multiple inflammatory diseases. NETs mediate inflammasome activation and IL-1β secretion from monocytes and cause airway epithelial cell injury, but the role of eDNA, NETs, and IL-1β in asthma is uncertain.
To characterize the role of activated neutrophils in severe asthma through measurement of NETs and inflammasome activation.
We measured sputum eDNA in induced sputum from 399 patients with asthma in the Severe Asthma Research Program-3 and in 94 healthy control subjects. We subdivided subjects with asthma into eDNA-low and -high subgroups to compare outcomes of asthma severity and of neutrophil and inflammasome activation. We also examined if NETs cause airway epithelial cell damage that can be prevented by DNase.
We found that 13% of the Severe Asthma Research Program-3 cohort is \"eDNA-high,\" as defined by sputum eDNA concentrations above the upper 95th percentile value in health. Compared with eDNA-low patients with asthma, eDNA-high patients had lower Asthma Control Test scores, frequent history of chronic mucus hypersecretion, and frequent use of oral corticosteroids for maintenance of asthma control (all
values <0.05). Sputum eDNA in asthma was associated with airway neutrophilic inflammation, increases in soluble NET components, and increases in caspase 1 activity and IL-1β (all
values <0.001). In
studies, NETs caused cytotoxicity in airway epithelial cells that was prevented by disruption of NETs with DNase.
High extracellular DNA concentrations in sputum mark a subset of patients with more severe asthma who have NETs and markers of inflammasome activation in their airways.
Journal Article
Animal models of headache: from bedside to bench and back to bedside
by
Romero-Reyes, Marcela
,
Andreou, Anna P
,
Summ, Oliver
in
Animal models in research
,
Animals
,
Care and treatment
2010
In recent years bench-based studies have greatly enhanced our understanding of headache pathophysiology, while facilitating the development of new headache medicines. At present, established animal models of headache utilize activation of pain-producing cranial structures, which for a complex syndrome, such as migraine, leaves many dimensions of the syndrome unstudied. The focus on modeling the central nociceptive mechanisms and the complexity of sensory phenomena that accompany migraine may offer new approaches for the development of new therapeutics. Given the complexity of the primary headaches, multiple approaches and techniques need to be employed. As an example, recently a model for trigeminal autonomic cephalalgias has been tested successfully, while by contrast, a satisfactory model of tension-type headache has been elusive. Moreover, although useful in many regards, migraine models are yet to provide a more complete picture of the disorder.
Journal Article
Thiol drugs decrease SARS-CoV-2 lung injury in vivo and disrupt SARS-CoV-2 spike complex binding to ACE2 in vitro
2021
Neutrophil-induced oxidative stress is a mechanism of lung injury in COVID-19, and drugs with a functional thiol group (\"thiol drugs\"), especially cysteamine, have anti-oxidant and anti-inflammatory properties that could limit this injury. Thiol drugs may also alter the redox status of the cysteine-rich SARS-CoV-2 spike glycoprotein (SARS-2-S) and thereby disrupt ACE2 binding. Using ACE2 binding assay, reporter virus pseudotyped with SARS-CoV-2 spikes (ancestral and variants) and authentic SARS-CoV-2 (Wuhan-1), we find that multiple thiol drugs inhibit SARS-2-S binding to ACE2 and virus entry into cells. Pseudoviruses carrying variant spikes were less efficiently inhibited as compared to pseudotypes bearing an ancestral spike, but the most potent drugs still inhibited the Delta variant in the low millimolar range. IC50 values followed the order of their cystine cleavage rates and lower thiol pKa values. In hamsters infected with SARS-CoV-2, intraperitoneal (IP) cysteamine decreased neutrophilic inflammation and alveolar hemorrhage in the lungs but did not decrease viral infection, most likely because IP delivery could not achieve millimolar concentrations in the airways. These data show that thiol drugs inhibit SARS-CoV-2 infection in vitro and reduce SARS-CoV-2-related lung injury in vivo and provide strong rationale for trials of systemically delivered thiol drugs as COVID-19 treatments. We propose that antiviral effects of thiol drugs in vivo will require delivery directly to the airways to ensure millimolar drug concentrations and that thiol drugs with lower thiol pKa values are most likely to be effective.Neutrophil-induced oxidative stress is a mechanism of lung injury in COVID-19, and drugs with a functional thiol group (\"thiol drugs\"), especially cysteamine, have anti-oxidant and anti-inflammatory properties that could limit this injury. Thiol drugs may also alter the redox status of the cysteine-rich SARS-CoV-2 spike glycoprotein (SARS-2-S) and thereby disrupt ACE2 binding. Using ACE2 binding assay, reporter virus pseudotyped with SARS-CoV-2 spikes (ancestral and variants) and authentic SARS-CoV-2 (Wuhan-1), we find that multiple thiol drugs inhibit SARS-2-S binding to ACE2 and virus entry into cells. Pseudoviruses carrying variant spikes were less efficiently inhibited as compared to pseudotypes bearing an ancestral spike, but the most potent drugs still inhibited the Delta variant in the low millimolar range. IC50 values followed the order of their cystine cleavage rates and lower thiol pKa values. In hamsters infected with SARS-CoV-2, intraperitoneal (IP) cysteamine decreased neutrophilic inflammation and alveolar hemorrhage in the lungs but did not decrease viral infection, most likely because IP delivery could not achieve millimolar concentrations in the airways. These data show that thiol drugs inhibit SARS-CoV-2 infection in vitro and reduce SARS-CoV-2-related lung injury in vivo and provide strong rationale for trials of systemically delivered thiol drugs as COVID-19 treatments. We propose that antiviral effects of thiol drugs in vivo will require delivery directly to the airways to ensure millimolar drug concentrations and that thiol drugs with lower thiol pKa values are most likely to be effective.
Journal Article
Binding of SARS-CoV-2 spike protein to ACE2 is disabled by thiol-based drugs; evidence from in vitro SARS-CoV-2 infection studies
2020
Abstract Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is caused by the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), and the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein is an envelope glycoprotein that binds angiotensin converting enzyme 2 as an entry receptor. The capacity of enveloped viruses to infect host cells depends on a precise thiol/disulfide balance in their surface glycoprotein complexes. To determine if cystines in the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein maintain a native binding interface that can be disrupted by drugs that cleave cystines, we tested if thiol-based drugs have efficacy in receptor binding and cell infection assays. We found that thiol-based drugs, cysteamine and WR-1065 (the active metabolite of amifostine) in particular, decrease binding of SARS-CoV-2 spike protein to its receptor, decrease the entry efficiency of SARS-CoV-2 spike pseudotyped virus, and inhibit SARS-CoV-2 live virus infection. Our findings uncover a vulnerability of SARS-CoV-2 to thiol-based drugs and provide rationale to test thiol-based drugs, especially cysteamine and amifostine, as novel treatments for COVID-19. One Sentence Summary Thiol-based drugs decrease binding of SARS-CoV-2 spike protein to its receptor and inhibit SARS-CoV-2 cell entry. Competing Interest Statement John Fahy, Irina Gitlin and Wilfred Raymond are inventors on patent applications related to use of thiol-based drugs as treatments for mucus pathology and COVID19. The other authors have no competing interests.