Hypoxia Increases the Potential for Neutrophil-mediated Endothelial Damage in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease.
Authors
Vassallo, Arlette
Liu, Bin
Long, Merete
Tong, Zhen
Newby, Paul R
Agha-Jaffar, Danya
Paschalaki, Koralia
Green, Clara E
Belchamber, Kylie BR
Ridger, Victoria C
Stockley, Robert A
Sapey, Elizabeth
Summers, Charlotte
Cowburn, Andrew S
Chilvers, Edwin R
Li, Wei
Condliffe, Alison M
Publication Date
2022-04-15Journal Title
Am J Respir Crit Care Med
ISSN
1073-449X
Publisher
American Thoracic Society
Type
Article
This Version
AM
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Lodge, K. M., Vassallo, A., Liu, B., Long, M., Tong, Z., Newby, P. R., Agha-Jaffar, D., et al. (2022). Hypoxia Increases the Potential for Neutrophil-mediated Endothelial Damage in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease.. Am J Respir Crit Care Med https://doi.org/10.1164/rccm.202006-2467OC
Abstract
Rationale: Patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) experience excess cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, and exacerbations further increase the risk of such events. COPD is associated with persistent blood and airway neutrophilia and systemic and tissue hypoxia. Hypoxia augments neutrophil elastase release, enhancing capacity for tissue injury. Objective: To determine whether hypoxia-driven neutrophil protein secretion contributes to endothelial damage in COPD. Methods: The healthy human neutrophil secretome generated under normoxic or hypoxic conditions was characterized by quantitative mass spectrometry, and the capacity for neutrophil-mediated endothelial damage was assessed. Histotoxic protein concentrations were measured in normoxic versus hypoxic neutrophil supernatants and plasma from patients experiencing COPD exacerbation and healthy control subjects. Measurements and Main Results: Hypoxia promoted PI3Kγ-dependent neutrophil elastase secretion, with greater release seen in neutrophils from patients with COPD. Supernatants from neutrophils incubated under hypoxia caused pulmonary endothelial cell damage, and identical supernatants from COPD neutrophils increased neutrophil adherence to endothelial cells. Proteomics revealed differential neutrophil protein secretion under hypoxia and normoxia, and hypoxia augmented secretion of a subset of histotoxic granule and cytosolic proteins, with significantly greater release seen in COPD neutrophils. The plasma of patients with COPD had higher content of hypoxia-upregulated neutrophil-derived proteins and protease activity, and vascular injury markers. Conclusions: Hypoxia drives a destructive "hypersecretory" neutrophil phenotype conferring enhanced capacity for endothelial injury, with a corresponding signature of neutrophil degranulation and vascular injury identified in plasma of patients with COPD. Thus, hypoxic enhancement of neutrophil degranulation may contribute to increased cardiovascular risk in COPD. These insights may identify new therapeutic opportunities for endothelial damage in COPD.
Keywords
cardiovascular disease, cell degranulation, neutrophil elastase, vascular endothelium, Endothelial Cells, Humans, Hypoxia, Leukocyte Elastase, Neutrophils, Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive, Vascular System Injuries
Sponsorship
British Heart Foundation (None)
Wellcome Trust (102706/Z/13/Z)
British Heart Foundation (PG/15/39/31519)
British Heart Foundation (PG/17/1/32532)
British Heart Foundation (PG/17/58/33134)
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1164/rccm.202006-2467OC
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/331668
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