Bronchoconstriction damages airway epithelia by crowding-induced excess cell extrusion
- PMID: 38574138
- DOI: 10.1126/science.adk2758
Bronchoconstriction damages airway epithelia by crowding-induced excess cell extrusion
Abstract
Asthma is deemed an inflammatory disease, yet the defining diagnostic feature is mechanical bronchoconstriction. We previously discovered a conserved process called cell extrusion that drives homeostatic epithelial cell death when cells become too crowded. In this work, we show that the pathological crowding of a bronchoconstrictive attack causes so much epithelial cell extrusion that it damages the airways, resulting in inflammation and mucus secretion in both mice and humans. Although relaxing the airways with the rescue treatment albuterol did not affect these responses, inhibiting live cell extrusion signaling during bronchoconstriction prevented all these features. Our findings show that bronchoconstriction causes epithelial damage and inflammation by excess crowding-induced cell extrusion and suggest that blocking epithelial extrusion, instead of the ensuing downstream inflammation, could prevent the feed-forward asthma inflammatory cycle.
Update of
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Bronchoconstriction damages airway epithelia by excess crowding-induced extrusion.bioRxiv [Preprint]. 2023 Aug 11:2023.08.04.551943. doi: 10.1101/2023.08.04.551943. bioRxiv. 2023. Update in: Science. 2024 Apr 5;384(6691):66-73. doi: 10.1126/science.adk2758. PMID: 37577550 Free PMC article. Updated. Preprint.
Comment in
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Epithelial cells crowded out in asthma.Science. 2024 Apr 5;384(6691):30-31. doi: 10.1126/science.ado4514. Epub 2024 Apr 4. Science. 2024. PMID: 38574157
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