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Apoptosis of viral-infected airway epithelial cells limit viral production and is altered by corticosteroid exposure

BACKGROUND: Effects of respiratory viral infection on airway epithelium include airway hyper-responsiveness and inflammation. Both features may contribute to the development of asthma. Excessive damage and loss of epithelial cells are characteristic in asthma and may result from viral infection. OBJ...

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Autores principales: Singhera, Gurpreet K, Chan, Tiffany S, Cheng, Jenny Y, Vitalis, Timothy Z, Hamann, Kimm J, Dorscheid, Delbert R
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1488843/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16709253
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1465-9921-7-78
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author Singhera, Gurpreet K
Chan, Tiffany S
Cheng, Jenny Y
Vitalis, Timothy Z
Hamann, Kimm J
Dorscheid, Delbert R
author_facet Singhera, Gurpreet K
Chan, Tiffany S
Cheng, Jenny Y
Vitalis, Timothy Z
Hamann, Kimm J
Dorscheid, Delbert R
author_sort Singhera, Gurpreet K
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Effects of respiratory viral infection on airway epithelium include airway hyper-responsiveness and inflammation. Both features may contribute to the development of asthma. Excessive damage and loss of epithelial cells are characteristic in asthma and may result from viral infection. OBJECTIVE: To investigate apoptosis in Adenoviral-infected Guinea pigs and determine the role of death receptor and ligand expression in the airway epithelial response to limit viral infection. METHODS: Animal models included both an Acute and a Chronic Adeno-infection with ovalbumin-induced airway inflammation with/without corticosteroid treatment. Isolated airway epithelial cells were cultured to study viral production after infection under similar conditions. Immunohistochemistry, western blots and viral DNA detection were used to assess apoptosis, death receptor and TRAIL expression and viral release. RESULTS: In vivo and in vitro Adeno-infection demonstrated different apoptotic and death receptors (DR) 4 and 5 expression in response to corticosteroid exposure. In the Acute Adeno-infection model, apoptosis and DR4/5 expression was coordinated and were time-dependent. However, in vitro Acute viral infection in the presence of corticosteroids demonstrated delayed apoptosis and prolonged viral particle production. This reduction in apoptosis in Adeno-infected epithelial cells by corticosteroids exposure induced a prolonged virus production via both DR4 and TRAIL protein suppression. In the Chronic model where animals were ovalbumin-sensitized/challenged and were treated with corticosteroids, apoptosis was reduced relative to adenovirus-infected or corticosteroid alone. CONCLUSION: Our data suggests that apoptosis of infected cells limits viral production and may be mediated by DR4/5 and TRAIL expression. In the Acute model of Adeno-infection, corticosteroid exposure may prolong viral particle production by altering this apoptotic response of the infected cells. This results from decreased DR4 and TRAIL expression. In the Chronic model treated with corticosteroids, a similar decreased apoptosis was observed. This data suggests that DR and TRAIL modulation by corticosteroids may be important in viral infection of airway epithelium. The prolonged virus release in the setting of corticosteroids may result from reduced apoptosis and suppressed DR4/TRAIL expression by the infected cells.
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spelling pubmed-14888432006-07-06 Apoptosis of viral-infected airway epithelial cells limit viral production and is altered by corticosteroid exposure Singhera, Gurpreet K Chan, Tiffany S Cheng, Jenny Y Vitalis, Timothy Z Hamann, Kimm J Dorscheid, Delbert R Respir Res Research BACKGROUND: Effects of respiratory viral infection on airway epithelium include airway hyper-responsiveness and inflammation. Both features may contribute to the development of asthma. Excessive damage and loss of epithelial cells are characteristic in asthma and may result from viral infection. OBJECTIVE: To investigate apoptosis in Adenoviral-infected Guinea pigs and determine the role of death receptor and ligand expression in the airway epithelial response to limit viral infection. METHODS: Animal models included both an Acute and a Chronic Adeno-infection with ovalbumin-induced airway inflammation with/without corticosteroid treatment. Isolated airway epithelial cells were cultured to study viral production after infection under similar conditions. Immunohistochemistry, western blots and viral DNA detection were used to assess apoptosis, death receptor and TRAIL expression and viral release. RESULTS: In vivo and in vitro Adeno-infection demonstrated different apoptotic and death receptors (DR) 4 and 5 expression in response to corticosteroid exposure. In the Acute Adeno-infection model, apoptosis and DR4/5 expression was coordinated and were time-dependent. However, in vitro Acute viral infection in the presence of corticosteroids demonstrated delayed apoptosis and prolonged viral particle production. This reduction in apoptosis in Adeno-infected epithelial cells by corticosteroids exposure induced a prolonged virus production via both DR4 and TRAIL protein suppression. In the Chronic model where animals were ovalbumin-sensitized/challenged and were treated with corticosteroids, apoptosis was reduced relative to adenovirus-infected or corticosteroid alone. CONCLUSION: Our data suggests that apoptosis of infected cells limits viral production and may be mediated by DR4/5 and TRAIL expression. In the Acute model of Adeno-infection, corticosteroid exposure may prolong viral particle production by altering this apoptotic response of the infected cells. This results from decreased DR4 and TRAIL expression. In the Chronic model treated with corticosteroids, a similar decreased apoptosis was observed. This data suggests that DR and TRAIL modulation by corticosteroids may be important in viral infection of airway epithelium. The prolonged virus release in the setting of corticosteroids may result from reduced apoptosis and suppressed DR4/TRAIL expression by the infected cells. BioMed Central 2006 2006-05-18 /pmc/articles/PMC1488843/ /pubmed/16709253 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1465-9921-7-78 Text en Copyright © 2006 Singhera et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Singhera, Gurpreet K
Chan, Tiffany S
Cheng, Jenny Y
Vitalis, Timothy Z
Hamann, Kimm J
Dorscheid, Delbert R
Apoptosis of viral-infected airway epithelial cells limit viral production and is altered by corticosteroid exposure
title Apoptosis of viral-infected airway epithelial cells limit viral production and is altered by corticosteroid exposure
title_full Apoptosis of viral-infected airway epithelial cells limit viral production and is altered by corticosteroid exposure
title_fullStr Apoptosis of viral-infected airway epithelial cells limit viral production and is altered by corticosteroid exposure
title_full_unstemmed Apoptosis of viral-infected airway epithelial cells limit viral production and is altered by corticosteroid exposure
title_short Apoptosis of viral-infected airway epithelial cells limit viral production and is altered by corticosteroid exposure
title_sort apoptosis of viral-infected airway epithelial cells limit viral production and is altered by corticosteroid exposure
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1488843/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16709253
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1465-9921-7-78
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