Severgnini Mariano, Takahashi Satoe, Tu Powen, Perides George, Homer Robert J, Jhung Jhung W, Bhavsar Deepa, Cochran Brent H, Simon Amy R
Pulmonary and Critical Care Division, Tufts-New England Medical Center, Box 369, 750 Washington Street, Boston, MA 02111, USA.
Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2005 Apr 15;171(8):858-67. doi: 10.1164/rccm.200407-981OC. Epub 2005 Jan 21.
The cascade of cellular and molecular pathways mediating acute lung injury is complex and incompletely defined. Although the Src and Jak family of kinases is upregulated in LPS-induced murine lung injury, their role in the development of lung injury is unknown. Here we report that systemic inhibition of these kinases using specific small molecule inhibitors (PP2, SU6656, tyrphostin A1) significantly attenuated LPS-induced lung injury, as determined by histologic and capillary permeability assays. These inhibitors blocked LPS-dependent cytokine and chemokine production in the lung and in the serum. In contrast, lung-targeted inhibition of these kinases in the airway epithelium via adenoviral-mediated gene transfer of dominant negative Src or of suppressor of cytokine signaling (SOCS-1) disrupted lung cytokine production but had no effect on systemic cytokine production or lung vascular permeability. Mice were significantly protected from lethal LPS challenge by the small molecule inhibitors of Jak and Src kinase. Importantly, this protection was still evident even when the inhibitors were administered 6 hours after LPS challenge. Taken together, these observations suggest that Jak and Src kinases participate in acute lung injury and verify the potential of this class of selective tyrosine kinase inhibitors to serve as novel therapeutic agents for this disease.