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. 2010 Aug 1;182(3):317-24.
doi: 10.1164/rccm.200905-0745OC. Epub 2010 Apr 15.

T Cells localize with proliferating smooth muscle alpha-actin+ cell compartments in asthma

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T Cells localize with proliferating smooth muscle alpha-actin+ cell compartments in asthma

David Ramos-Barbón et al. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. .

Abstract

Rationale: Airway remodeling in asthma comprises increased airway smooth muscle (ASM), an alteration linked to airway hyperresponsiveness and disease severity. Experimental studies showed that T cells adhere to ASM through vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 (VCAM-1) and drive ASM growth through direct contact between the T cells and smooth muscle alpha-actin (alpha-SMA)(+) cells.

Objectives: To support the hypothesis of a T-cell/alpha-SMA(+) cell contact mechanism of ASM remodeling in asthma, using bronchial biopsies.

Methods: We performed quantitative morphology on T cells, proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), alpha-SMA, and VCAM-1 on biopsies from subjects with moderate and severe asthma and healthy control subjects.

Measurements and main results: We demonstrate ASM cell proliferation and infiltration by T cells in proportion to severity in the subjects with asthma. T cells localized with alpha-SMA(+)PCNA(+) cells, suggesting direct intercellular contact and a relationship with alpha-SMA(+) cell proliferation. Furthermore, the subjects with asthma developed a proliferating compartment of subepithelial alpha-SMA(+), nonorganized airway contractile elements (NOACE), suggesting a phenotype gradient from undifferentiated cells to smooth muscle-like cells. T-cell juxtaposition events were also observed in this compartment and correlated to its mass. The subjects with asthma showed VCAM-1 expression in postcapillary venules and clusters of VCAM-1 immunoreactivity in ASM and NOACE, consistent with a role of VCAM-1 in T-cell/alpha-SMA(+) cell interaction.

Conclusions: T cells may induce alpha-SMA(+) cell proliferation through direct intercellular contact. NOACE may in part contribute to ASM growth through differentiation and translocation of alpha-SMA(+) cells. The findings support the role of the T cell in ASM remodeling in asthma.

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