Shuhui Lim, Mok Yu-Keung, Wong W S Fred
Cell Division and Cancer Laboratory, Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology, Agency for Science, Technology and Research, National University of Singapore, Singapore 117456, Singapore.
Int Arch Allergy Immunol. 2009;149(4):369-77. doi: 10.1159/000205583. Epub 2009 Mar 17.
Asthma is a chronic inflammatory disease characterized by airway inflammation, mucus hypersecretion and airway hyperresponsiveness. Mechanisms underlying the pathogenesis of asthma are not fully understood. In recent years, there are mounting evidences demonstrating that mammalian chitinases may play a key role in mediating the T-helper 2 cell-driven inflammatory response that is commonly associated with asthma. Chitinases (e.g., chitotriosidase and acidic mammalian chitinase) are enzymes that degrade chitin, the second most abundant biopolymer that can be found in the cell walls of fungi, microfilarial sheaths of helminths, and exoskeletons of insects and crustaceans. There are also chitinase-like proteins (e.g., YKL-40, Ym1 and Ym2) that lack chitinolytic activity but retain chitin-binding ability. Therefore, chitinases were originally believed to function in host defense against parasitic infections, but the first discovery of their role in inflammatory airway diseases came as a surprise. There is ample evidence to support an association of acidic mammalian chitinase and YKL-40 with allergic bronchial asthma in patients. Our recent studies in a mouse asthma model revealed that anti-inflammatory drugs like corticosteroid and cysteinyl leukotriene receptor antagonist were able to suppress elevated pulmonary levels of mammalian chitinases. Taken together, mammalian chitinases may be useful as biomarkers for asthma. Notwithstanding, large-scale multi-center association studies are required to confirm this hypothesis. Besides, substantially more works using knockout mice, recombinant chitinases and siRNA technology are required to investigate a potential role of chitinases in the pathogenesis of asthma.
哮喘是一种慢性炎症性疾病,其特征为气道炎症、黏液分泌过多和气道高反应性。哮喘发病机制尚未完全明确。近年来,越来越多的证据表明,哺乳动物几丁质酶可能在介导与哮喘通常相关的辅助性T2细胞驱动的炎症反应中起关键作用。几丁质酶(如壳三糖酶和酸性哺乳动物几丁质酶)是降解几丁质的酶,几丁质是第二丰富的生物聚合物,可存在于真菌细胞壁、蠕虫的微丝鞘以及昆虫和甲壳类动物的外骨骼中。也有一些几丁质酶样蛋白(如YKL-40、Ym1和Ym2),它们缺乏几丁质分解活性,但保留几丁质结合能力。因此,几丁质酶最初被认为在宿主抵御寄生虫感染中发挥作用,但它们在炎症性气道疾病中的作用首次被发现时令人惊讶。有充分证据支持酸性哺乳动物几丁质酶和YKL-40与患者过敏性支气管哮喘相关。我们最近在小鼠哮喘模型中的研究表明,皮质类固醇和半胱氨酰白三烯受体拮抗剂等抗炎药物能够抑制哺乳动物几丁质酶在肺部水平的升高。综上所述,哺乳动物几丁质酶可能作为哮喘的生物标志物。尽管如此,仍需要大规模多中心关联研究来证实这一假设。此外,还需要更多使用基因敲除小鼠、重组几丁质酶和小干扰RNA技术的研究来探讨几丁质酶在哮喘发病机制中的潜在作用。