12/15-lipoxygenase expressed in non-epithelial cells causes airway epithelial injury in asthma

Mabalirajan, Ulaganathan ; Rehman, Rakhshinda ; Ahmad, Tanveer ; Kumar, Sarvesh ; Leishangthem, Geeta Devi ; Singh, Suchita ; Dinda, Amit Kumar ; Biswal, Shyam ; Agrawal, Anurag ; Ghosh, Balaram (2013) 12/15-lipoxygenase expressed in non-epithelial cells causes airway epithelial injury in asthma Scientific Reports, 3 (1). ISSN 2045-2322

Full text not available from this repository.

Official URL: http://doi.org/10.1038/srep01540

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep01540

Abstract

The mechanisms underlying asthmatic airway epithelial injury are not clear. 12/15-lipoxygenase (an ortholog of human 15-LOX-1), which is induced by IL-13, is associated with mitochondrial degradation in reticulocytes at physiological conditions. In this study, we showed that 12/15-LOX expressed in nonepithelial cells caused epithelial injury in asthma pathogenesis. While 12/15-LOX overexpression or IL-13 administration to naïve mice showed airway epithelial injury, 12/15-LOX knockout/knockdown in allergic mice reduced airway epithelial injury. The constitutive expression of 15-LOX-1 in bronchial epithelia of normal human lungs further indicated that epithelial 15-LOX-1 may not cause epithelial injury. 12/15-LOX expression is increased in various inflammatory cells in allergic mice. Though non-epithelial cells such as macrophages or fibroblasts released 12/15-LOX metabolites upon IL-13 induction, bronchial epithelia didn't release. Further 12-S-HETE, arachidonic acid metabolite of 12/15-LOX leads to epithelial injury. These findings suggested 12/15-LOX expressed in non-epithelial cells such as macrophages and fibroblasts leads to bronchial epithelial injury.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Nature Publishing Group.
ID Code:120889
Deposited On:06 Jul 2021 12:29
Last Modified:06 Jul 2021 12:29

Repository Staff Only: item control page