122 resultados para cell function
Resumo:
Rationale: In cystic fibrosis (CF) a reduction in airway surface liquid (ASL) height
compromises mucociliary clearance, favoring mucus plugging and chronic bacterial infection. Inhibitors of ENaC have therapeutic potential in CF airways to reduce the hyperstimulated sodium and fluid absorption to levels which can restore airways hydration.
Objectives: To determine whether a novel compound (QUB-TL1) designed to inhibit protease/ENaC signaling in CF airways restores ASL volume and mucociliary function.
Methods: Protease activity was measured using fluorogenic activity assays. Differentiated primary airway epithelial cell cultures (F508del homozygotes) were used to determined ENaC activity (Ussing chamber recordings), ASL height (confocal microscopy) and mucociliary function (by tracking the surface flow of apically applied microbeads). Cell toxicity was measured by LDH assay.
Measurements and Results: QUB-TL1 inhibits extracellularly-located CAPs, including prostasin, matriptase and furin, the activities of which are observed at excessive levels at the apical surface of CF airway epithelial cells (AECs). QUB-TL1-mediated CAPs inhibition results in diminished ENaC-mediated Na+ absorption in CF AECs due to internalization of a prominent pool of cleaved (active) ENaCγ from the cell surface. Importantly, diminished ENaC activity correlates with improved airway hydration status and mucociliary clearance. We further demonstrate QUB-TL1-mediated furin inhibition, which is in contrast to other serine protease inhibitors (camostat mesylate and aprotinin), affords protection against neutrophil elastase-mediated ENaC activation and Pseudomonas aeruginosa exotoxin A induced cell death.
Conclusions: QUB-TL1 corrects aberrant CAP activities providing a mechanism to delay or prevent the development of CF lung disease in a manner independent of CFTR mutation.
Resumo:
Analgesics which affect prostaglandin (PG) pathways are used by most pregnant women. As germ cells (GC) undergo developmental and epigenetic changes in fetal life and are PG targets, we investigated if exposure of pregnant rats to analgesics (indomethacin or acetaminophen) affected GC development and reproductive function in resulting offspring (F1) or in the F2 generation. Exposure to either analgesic reduced F1 fetal GC number in both sexes and altered the tempo of fetal GC development sex-dependently, with delayed meiotic entry in oogonia but accelerated GC differentiation in males. These effects persisted in adult F1 females as reduced ovarian and litter size, whereas F1 males recovered normal GC numbers and fertility by adulthood. F2 offspring deriving from an analgesic-exposed F1 parent also exhibited sex-specific changes. F2 males exhibited normal reproductive development whereas F2 females had smaller ovaries and reduced follicle numbers during puberty/adulthood; as similar changes were found for F2 offspring of analgesic-exposed F1 fathers or mothers, we interpret this as potentially indicating an analgesic-induced change to GC in F1. Assuming our results are translatable to humans, they raise concerns that analgesic use in pregnancy could potentially affect fertility of resulting daughters and grand-daughters.