16 research outputs found

    Rôle des neutrophiles dans l'inflammation allergique associée au souffle chez le cheval, un modèle naturel d'asthme

    Full text link
    Réalisé en cotutelle avec le Dr James G Martin de l'Université McGill (Meakins-Christie laboratories)L’asthme chez l’homme et le souffle chez le cheval sont des maladies inflammatoires chroniques des voies respiratoires partageant plusieurs caractéristiques physiopathologiques dont la bronchoconstriction réversible, l’inflammation des voies respiratoires inférieures, l’hyperréactivité bronchique et le remodelage tissulaire. Les phénotypes cliniques d’asthme se caractérisent en partie selon le type d’inflammation affectant les voies respiratoires et la présence ou non d’allergie. Le souffle chez le cheval s’avère être un modèle adapté pour l’étude des mécanismes impliqués dans l’asthme neutrophilique, lesquels demeurent particulièrement mal compris, en contraste avec ceux associés avec l’asthme éosinophilique. La réponse immunologique sous-jacente au souffle implique entre autres l’expression de cytokines de type Th2, suggestives d’une réponse allergique (immunité acquise). La poussière environnementale qui provoque les symptômes du souffle contient également des agents non-spécifiques dérivés de bactéries, champignons et moisissures, susceptibles d’activer des mécanismes immunitaires innés chez les chevaux atteints du souffle. Nous avons étudié le rôle des neutrophiles dans l’inflammation associée à la réponse innée et acquise chez le cheval atteint du souffle. Dans un premier temps, l’effet de produits dérivés de bactéries sur l’activation des neutrophiles sanguins provenant de chevaux normaux et atteints de souffle a été étudié dans le but d’évaluer la contribution de la réponse innée dans la physiopathologie du souffle. Nous avons évalué l’effet de l’IL-4, une cytokine de type Th2, sur les neutrophiles des deux groupes de chevaux afin d’évaluer de quelle manière le neutrophile peut participer à la réponse acquise associée à la réponse allergique. Finalement, nous avons étudié l’expression des isoformes de l'arginase par les neutrophiles équins car cette enzyme métabolise la L-arginine et est potentiellement impliquée dans le bronchospasme et le remodelage tissulaire associés à l’asthme. Nos résultats suggèrent que les neutrophiles et les mononucléaires sanguins isolés des chevaux atteints du souffle possèdent une réponse inflammatoire exagérée en réponse aux lipopolyssacharides et peptides formylés et surexpriment les cytokines pro-inflammatoires IL-1β, TNF et IL-8. Cette réponse innée aberrante est associée à une inflammation systémique caractérisée par des concentrations sériques élevées de TNF chez les chevaux atteints du souffle en période de rémission clinique. De plus, nos résultats montrent que l’IL-4 active le neutrophile équin et favorise son chimiotactisme de manière autocrine. L’IL-4 induit un phénotype d’activation typique dans le neutrophile équin, caractérisé par l’expression accrue des cytokines pro-inflammatoires (IL-8 et TNF) ainsi que de récepteurs potentiellement impliqués dans la réponse allergique (IL-4Rα et CD23). Enfin, nous montrons que que l’arginase 1 n’est pas un marqueur de l’activation des neutrophiles équins par l’IL-4, mais que ces cellules expriment constitutivement l’isoforme 2 fonctionnelle de l’arginase. La surrégulation des deux isoformes au niveau des poumons périphériques semble être associée à la pathologie du souffle, ce qui est en accord avec les modèles d’asthme chez la souris, le rat et le cobaye. L'ensemble de ces travaux suggère que les neutrophiles sont des cellules effectrices importantes de la réponse innée et acquise dans la pathophysiologie du souffle, un modèle naturel d’asthme neutrophilique.Human asthma and equine heaves are chronic pulmonary diseases sharing several pathophysiological properties including lower airway inflammation, reversible bronchoconstriction, bronchial hyperresponsiveness, and tissue remodeling. Clinical phenotypes of asthma are characterized in part by the inflammatory cell populations infiltrating the airways, and the presence or absence of allergy. Heaves is a suitable animal model for the study of the poorly defined pathophysiological processes leading to airway neutrophilia. The immune response in heaves involves Th2 cytokine expression, which is, among other features, associated to allergic inflammation (acquired immunity). Environmental dust exposure leading to clinical exacerbation of heaves contains non-specific agents derived from bacteria, molds or fungi which could also activate innate immune responses in heaves affected horses. We studied the role of neutrophils in innate and acquired immune responses in heaves affected-horse. First, innate immune responses of neutrophils isolated from normal and heaves-affected horses to bacterial-derived products were studied. We also assessed the effect of IL-4, a Th2 cytokine, on equine neutrophils isolated from both groups of horses. Finally, we evaluated the arginase isoforms expressed by equine neutrophils as this enzyme that takes part to the L-arginine metabolism and is thought to contribute to bronchospasm and tissue remodeling associated with asthma. Our results suggest that both neutrophils and mononuclear cells from heaves-affected horses, when compared to healthy horses, have an excessive inflammatory response to lipopolyssacharides and formylated peptides characterized by increased IL-1β, IL-8 and TNF expression. This altered innate response was associated with systemic inflammation in asymptomatic susceptible horses as high serum TNF concentrations were detected. Furthermore, we found that equine neutrophils are activated by IL-4 and release neutrophil chemotactic factors in response to this cytokine. IL-4 also induces a distinctive activation phenotype in neutrophils that is characterized by increased expression of the pro-inflammatory cytokines (IL-8 and TNF) and receptors (IL-4Rα and CD23) potentially involved in the allergic response. Finally, we showed that arginase 1 is not a marker of IL-4-activated equine neutrophils although they constitutively express a functionally active isoform 2 of the enzyme. The up-regulation of arginase isoforms in the peripheral lungs of horses with heaves suggests a role for arginase in this model, as it is described in the mouse, rat and guinea pig models. Taken together, this work suggest that neutrophils could play an important role in both innate and acquired immune responses associated with heaves pathophysiology, a natural model of neutrophilic asthma

    Profiling of Differentially Expressed Genes Using Suppression Subtractive Hybridization in an Equine Model of Chronic Asthma

    Get PDF
    Background :\ud Gene expression analyses are used to investigate signaling pathways involved in diseases. In asthma, they have been primarily derived from the analysis of bronchial biopsies harvested from mild to moderate asthmatic subjects and controls. Due to ethical considerations, there is currently limited information on the transcriptome profile of the peripheral lung tissues in asthma.\ud \ud Objective :\ud To identify genes contributing to chronic inflammation and remodeling in the peripheral lung tissue of horses with heaves, a naturally occurring asthma-like condition.\ud \ud Methods :\ud Eleven adult horses (6 heaves-affected and 5 controls) were studied while horses with heaves were in clinical remission (Pasture), and during disease exacerbation induced by a 30-day natural antigen challenge during stabling (Challenge). Large peripheral lung biopsies were obtained by thoracoscopy at both time points. Using suppression subtractive hybridization (SSH), lung cDNAs of controls (Pasture and Challenge) and asymptomatic heaves-affected horses (Pasture) were subtracted from cDNAs of horses with heaves in clinical exacerbation (Challenge). The differential expression of selected genes of interest was confirmed using quantitative PCR assay.\ud \ud Results :\ud Horses with heaves, but not controls, developed airway obstruction when challenged. Nine hundred and fifty cDNA clones isolated from the subtracted library were screened by dot blot array and 224 of those showing the most marked expression differences were sequenced. The gene expression pattern was confirmed by quantitative PCR in 15 of 22 selected genes. Novel genes and genes with an already defined function in asthma were identified in the subtracted cDNA library. Genes of particular interest associated with asthmatic airway inflammation and remodeling included those related to PPP3CB/NFAT, RhoA, and LTB4/GPR44 signaling pathways.\ud \ud Conclusions :\ud Pathways representing new possible targets for anti-inflammatory and anti-remodeling therapies for asthma were identified. The findings of genes previously associated with asthma validate this equine model for gene expression studies

    Neutrophils Are Not Less Sensitive Than Other Blood Leukocytes to the Genomic Effects of Glucocorticoids

    Get PDF
    <div><h3>Background</h3><p>Neutrophils are generally considered less responsive to glucocorticoids compared to other inflammatory cells. The reported increase in human neutrophil survival mediated by these drugs partly supports this assertion. However, it was recently shown that dexamethasone exerts potent anti-inflammatory effects in equine peripheral blood neutrophils. Few comparative studies of glucocorticoid effects in neutrophils and other leukocytes have been reported and a relative insensitivity of neutrophils to these drugs could not be ruled out.</p> <h3>Objective</h3><p>We assessed glucocorticoid-responsiveness in equine and human peripheral blood neutrophils and neutrophil-depleted leukocytes.</p> <h3>Methods</h3><p>Blood neutrophils and neutrophil-depleted leukocytes were isolated from 6 healthy horses and 4 human healthy subjects. Cells were incubated for 5 h with or without LPS (100 ng/mL) alone or combined with hydrocortisone, prednisolone or dexamethasone (10<sup>−8</sup> M and 10<sup>−6</sup> M). IL-1β, TNF-α, IL-8, glutamine synthetase and GR-α mRNA expression was quantified by qPCR. Equine neutrophils were also incubated for 20 h with or without the three glucocorticoids and cell survival was assessed by flow cytometry and light microscopy on cytospin preparations.</p> <h3>Results</h3><p>We found that glucocorticoids down-regulated LPS-induced pro-inflammatory mRNA expression in both cell populations and species. These drugs also significantly increased glutamine synthetase gene expression in both equine cell populations. The magnitude of glucocorticoid response between cell populations was generally similar in both species. We also showed that dexamethasone had a comparable inhibitory effect on pro-inflammatory gene expression in both human and equine neutrophils. As reported in other species, glucocorticoids significantly increase the survival in equine neutrophils.</p> <h3>Conclusions</h3><p>Glucocorticoids exert genomic effects of similar magnitude on neutrophils and on other blood leukocytes. We speculate that the poor response to glucocorticoids observed in some chronic neutrophilic diseases such as severe asthma or COPD is not explained by a relative lack of inhibition of these drugs on pro-inflammatory cytokines expression in neutrophils.</p> </div

    Glucocorticoid effects on gene expression in equine peripheral blood neutrophils and neutrophil-depleted leukocytes.

    No full text
    <p>Neutrophils and neutrophil-depleted leukocytes were isolated from the blood of 6 healthy horses and were incubated for 5 h with or without lipopolysaccharide (LPS; 100 ng/mL) alone or combined with hydrocortisone (HC), prednisolone (PRED), dexamethasone (DEX) at 10<sup>−6</sup> M. Following culture, mRNA expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines (IL-1β, TNF-α and IL-8; A, B and C), glutamine synthetase (D) and GR-α (E) was quantified by qPCR. Absolute values were corrected using GAPDH as a reference gene. Gene expression was reported as the relative variation (fold increase) to unstimulated cell mRNA levels (arbitrary value of 1). Bars represent means + SEM. *Significant effect of treatment over LPS-stimulated cells (p≤0.014). †Significant difference between treatments (p = 0.009).</p

    Glucocorticoid effects on pro-inflammatory cytokines gene expression in human peripheral blood neutrophils and neutrophil-depleted leukocytes.

    No full text
    <p>Neutrophils and neutrophil depleted leukocytes were isolated from the blood of 4 healthy human volunteers and were incubated for 5 h with or without lipopolysaccharide (LPS; 100 ng/mL) alone or combined with dexamethasone (DEX) at 10<sup>−6</sup> M. Following culture, mRNA expression of proinflammatory cytokines (IL-1β, TNF-α and IL-8) was quantified by qPCR. Absolute values were corrected using GAPDH as a reference gene. A. Gene expression was reported as the relative variation (fold increase) to unstimulated cell mRNA levels (arbitrary value of 1). Bars represent means. *Significant effect of treatment over LPS-stimulated cells (p≤0.050). B. Dexamethasone percentage of inhibition on LPS-induced mRNA expression was compared between cell populations. A 100% inhibition means that mRNA expression returned to unstimulated cell basal mRNA level. Bars represent means. †Significant effect of treatment between cell populations (p = 0.048).</p
    corecore