Science and Research

Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency impairs lung antibacterial immunity in mice

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.

  • Ostermann, L.
  • Maus, R.
  • Stolper, J.
  • Schütte, L.
  • Katsarou, K.
  • Tumpara, S.
  • Pich, A.
  • Mueller, C.
  • Janciauskiene, S.
  • Welte, T.
  • Maus, U. A.

Keywords

  • Bacterial infections
  • Neutrophils
  • Proteases
  • Pulmonology
Publication details
DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.140816
Journal: JCI Insight
Number: 3
Work Type: Original
Location: BREATH
Disease Area: PALI, COPD
Partner / Member: MHH
Access-Number: 33554955

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