Mall Marcus A
Department of Translational Pulmonology and Division of Pediatric Pulmonology & Allergy and Cystic Fibrosis Center, Translational Lung Research Center Heidelberg, Member of the German Center for Lung Research (DZL), University of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany.
Ann Am Thorac Soc. 2016 Apr;13 Suppl 2:S177-85. doi: 10.1513/AnnalsATS.201509-641KV.
Airway mucus obstruction is a key feature of cystic fibrosis (CF) and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The thin layer of mucus that covers healthy airway surfaces has important protective functions in lung defense. However, excess mucus produces airflow obstruction and provides a nidus for bacterial infection and inflammation. Despite its importance in pathogenesis, understanding of the mechanisms underlying airway mucus obstruction, as well as therapeutic options, remain limited. Studies in the rare genetic disease CF identified airway surface dehydration due to cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene dysfunction as an important disease mechanism that may explain mucus stasis and plugging in a spectrum of muco-obstructive lung diseases, including COPD. This concept is supported by the phenotype of the β-epithelial Na(+) channel-transgenic mouse that exhibits airway surface dehydration and develops a spontaneous lung disease that shares key features with CF and COPD, such as airway mucus plugging, chronic neutrophilic inflammation, and structural lung damage. Furthermore, preclinical testing demonstrated that hydration strategies, including osmotically active hypertonic saline and preventive inhibition of the amiloride-sensitive epithelial Na(+) channel are effective in unplugging airways in this mouse model of chronic obstructive lung disease. On the other hand, genetic deletion of neutrophil elastase, a potent stimulus for mucus hypersecretion, reduced goblet cell metaplasia and mucin expression but had no effect on mucus obstruction in vivo. Collectively, these studies demonstrate that airway surface dehydration is sufficient to produce mucus obstruction even in the absence of mucus hypersecretion and support further clinical testing of hydrating agents as a promising therapeutic strategy to unplug mucus in CF and COPD.
气道黏液阻塞是囊性纤维化(CF)和慢性阻塞性肺疾病(COPD)的关键特征。覆盖健康气道表面的薄层黏液在肺部防御中具有重要的保护功能。然而,过多的黏液会导致气流阻塞,并为细菌感染和炎症提供病灶。尽管其在发病机制中很重要,但对气道黏液阻塞的潜在机制以及治疗选择的了解仍然有限。对罕见遗传病CF的研究表明,囊性纤维化跨膜传导调节因子(CFTR)基因功能障碍导致的气道表面脱水是一种重要的疾病机制,这可能解释了包括COPD在内的一系列黏液阻塞性肺病中的黏液淤滞和堵塞。β-上皮钠通道转基因小鼠的表型支持了这一概念,该小鼠表现出气道表面脱水,并发展出一种与CF和COPD具有共同关键特征的自发性肺病,如气道黏液堵塞、慢性嗜中性粒细胞炎症和肺部结构损伤。此外,临床前测试表明,包括具有渗透活性的高渗盐水和对氨氯地平敏感的上皮钠通道的预防性抑制在内的水化策略,在这种慢性阻塞性肺病小鼠模型中对疏通气道有效。另一方面,中性粒细胞弹性蛋白酶(一种黏液分泌过多的强效刺激物)的基因缺失减少了杯状细胞化生和黏蛋白表达,但对体内黏液阻塞没有影响。总体而言,这些研究表明,即使在没有黏液分泌过多的情况下,气道表面脱水也足以导致黏液阻塞,并支持将水化剂作为一种有前景的治疗策略进行进一步临床测试,以疏通CF和COPD中的黏液。