Science and Research

Azurocidin-1 as a mediator of bronchiectasis severity, epithelial defence, and target of dipeptidyl peptidase-1 inhibition: an international, multicohort study

BACKGROUND: Dipeptidyl peptidase-1 (DPP1) inhibitors prevent the activation of neutrophil serine proteases and reduce exacerbations in people with bronchiectasis. We previously identified a novel effect of DPP1 inhibitors in reducing the neutrophil pseudoenzyme azurocidin-1 (AZU1). The aim of this study was to investigate the role of AZU1 in the pathophysiology of bronchiectasis. METHODS: Sputum AZU1 concentrations were analysed in multiple cohorts. These consisted of two observational cohorts of patients with bronchiectasis (EMBARC BRIDGE cohort 1 and cohort 2) and a cohort of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD; TARDIS COPD cohort) to correlate AZU1 with disease severity and exacerbations. A rhinovirus challenge study was used to investigate AZU1 concentrations during experimental exacerbation in COPD, people who smoke, and controls. A post-hoc analysis of the phase 2 WILLOW trial of brensocatib versus placebo was used to assess the effect of DPP1 inhibition on airway AZU1. FINDINGS: Higher AZU1 sputum concentration was associated with increased bronchiectasis disease severity index (p<0.0001), decreased percentage predicted forced expiratory volume in 1 second (r=-0.4662, p<0.001), and increased exacerbation frequency (p<0.0019; EMBARC cohort 1, n=197). AZU1 was associated with radiological severity (Reiff score), symptoms (quality of life bronchiectasis respiratory symptom score), and bacterial infection (sputum microbiology and 16S microbiome alpha diversity; highest levels of AZU1 were found in airway samples with Pseudomonas aeruginosa; p<0.0001; EMBARC cohort 2, n=144). Bronchiectasis patients with bacterial and viral exacerbations had increased concentrations of AZU1 (p=0.0003; n=96). These findings were extended to COPD, in which AZU1 was related to COPD severity (COPD cohort, n=101), and in patients with COPD challenged with rhinovirus A16, AZU1 was increased at day 9 post-challenge (p<0.001; n=9). In-vitro AZU1 impaired ciliary function and epithelial integrity, suggesting a mechanism by which AZU1 drives disease pathogenesis. In a post-hoc analysis of the WILLOW trial, AZU1 was the most downregulated protein with brensocatib treatment (brensocatib 10 mg, n=71; brensocatib 25 mg, n=73; and placebo, n=71). Over 24 weeks, AZU1 was significantly reduced by DPP1 inhibition (p<0.0001). INTERPRETATION: AZU1 was identified as a novel marker of disease severity in bronchiectasis, associated with bacterial infection and exacerbation, and targeted by DPP1 inhibition. FUNDING: EMBARC3 and Insmed.

  • Shoemark, A.
  • Johnson, E. D.
  • Shuttleworth, M.
  • Schwiening, M.
  • Hull, R.
  • Stobo, J.
  • Abo-Leyah, H.
  • Finch, S.
  • Pollock, J.
  • Huang, J. T. J.
  • Richardson, H.
  • Perea, L.
  • McIntosh, E.
  • Cant, E.
  • Galloway, R.
  • Choi, H.
  • de Soyza, A.
  • Spinou, A.
  • Ringshausen, F. C.
  • Lorent, N.
  • Mallia, P.
  • Johnston, S. L.
  • Gierlinski, M.
  • Goeminne, P.
  • Loebinger, M. R.
  • Hua Gao, Y.
  • Chotirmall, S. H.
  • Dhar, R.
  • Haworth, C.
  • Altenburg, J.
  • Blasi, F.
  • Polverino, E.
  • Shteinberg, M.
  • Strickson, S.
  • Cipolla, D.
  • Teper, A.
  • Fernandez, C.
  • Shih, V. H.
  • Mange, K.
  • Singanayagam, A.
  • Aliberti, S.
  • Sibila, O.
  • Long, M. B.
  • Chalmers, J. D.
Publication details
DOI: 10.1016/S2213-2600(25)00334-0
Journal: Lancet Respir Med
Work Type: Original
Location: BREATH
Disease Area: CFBE
Partner / Member: MHH
Access-Number: 42044645
See publication on PubMed


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