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Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency impairs lung antibacterial immunity in mice
Lena Ostermann, … , Tobias Welte, Ulrich A. Maus
Lena Ostermann, … , Tobias Welte, Ulrich A. Maus
Published February 8, 2021
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2021;6(3):e140816. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.140816.
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Research Article Pulmonology

Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency impairs lung antibacterial immunity in mice

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Abstract

Alpha-1 antitrypsin (AAT) is a major inhibitor of serine proteases in mammals. Therefore, its deficiency leads to protease–antiprotease imbalance and a risk for developing lung emphysema. Although therapy with human plasma-purified AAT attenuates AAT deficiency–related emphysema, its impact on lung antibacterial immunity is poorly defined. Here, we examined the effect of AAT therapy on lung protective immunity in AAT-deficient (KO) mice challenged with Streptococcus pneumoniae. AAT-KO mice were highly susceptible to S. pneumoniae, as determined by severe lobar pneumonia and early mortality. Mechanistically, we found that neutrophil-derived elastase (NE) degraded the opsonophagocytically important collectins, surfactant protein A (SP-A) and D (SP-D), which was accompanied by significantly impaired lung bacterial clearance in S. pneumoniae–infected AAT-KO mice. Treatment of S. pneumoniae–infected AAT-KO mice with human AAT protected SP-A and SP-D from NE-mediated degradation and corrected the pulmonary pathology observed in these mice. Likewise, treatment with Sivelestat, a specific inhibitor of NE, also protected collectins from degradation and significantly decreased bacterial loads in S. pneumoniae–infected AAT-KO mice. Our findings show that NE is responsible for the degradation of lung SP-A and SP-D in AAT-KO mice affecting lung protective immunity in AAT deficiency.

Authors

Lena Ostermann, Regina Maus, Jennifer Stolper, Lisanne Schütte, Konstantina Katsarou, Srinu Tumpara, Andreas Pich, Christian Mueller, Sabina Janciauskiene, Tobias Welte, Ulrich A. Maus

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Figure 6

NE-AAT complex formation in BAL fluids of S. pneumoniae-challenged AAT-KO mice receiving augmentation therapy.

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NE-AAT complex formation in BAL fluids of S. pneumoniae-challenged AAT-K...
(A) AAT (lane 2, lower protein band) and NE-AAT complex formation (lanes 2 and 4, upper protein band) detected in BAL fluids of AAT-augmented AAT-KO mice but not in PBS-treated AAT-KO mice (lanes 1 and 3). As a control, blotting of hAAT protein only gave rise to 1 single band in Western blot analysis (lane 5), and hAAT preincubated with purified NE in vitro resulted in 2 AAT-specific bands representing noncomplexed, native hAAT and NE-complexed hAAT (lane 6). NE protein alone gave no signal in AAT-specific Western blotting (lane 7). Lanes 1 to 7 were run on the same gel but were noncontiguous. (B) BAL fluids of S. pneumoniae–challenged AAT-KO mice receiving AAT augmentation therapy as compared with vehicle were subjected to kinetic NE activity assay. Purified elastase served as positive control. Data are representative of 3 independently performed experiments.

Copyright © 2021 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN 2379-3708

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