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Hypoxia-Mediated Mechanism of MUC5AC Production in Human Nasal Epithelia and Its Implication in Rhinosinusitis

BACKGROUND: Excessive mucus production is typical in various upper airway diseases. In sinusitis, the expression of MUC5AC, a major respiratory mucin gene, increases. However, the mechanisms leading to mucus hypersecretion in sinusitis have not been characterized. Hypoxia due to occlusion of the sin...

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Autores principales: Kim, Yoon-Ju, Cho, Hyung-Ju, Shin, Woo-Chul, Song, Hyun-Ah, Yoon, Joo-Heon, Kim, Chang-Hoon
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4026485/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24840724
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0098136
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author Kim, Yoon-Ju
Cho, Hyung-Ju
Shin, Woo-Chul
Song, Hyun-Ah
Yoon, Joo-Heon
Kim, Chang-Hoon
author_facet Kim, Yoon-Ju
Cho, Hyung-Ju
Shin, Woo-Chul
Song, Hyun-Ah
Yoon, Joo-Heon
Kim, Chang-Hoon
author_sort Kim, Yoon-Ju
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Excessive mucus production is typical in various upper airway diseases. In sinusitis, the expression of MUC5AC, a major respiratory mucin gene, increases. However, the mechanisms leading to mucus hypersecretion in sinusitis have not been characterized. Hypoxia due to occlusion of the sinus ostium is one of the major pathologic mechanisms of sinusitis, but there have been no reports regarding the mechanism of hypoxia-induced mucus hypersecretion. METHODS AND FINDINGS: This study aims to identify whether hypoxia may induce mucus hypersecretion and elucidate its mechanism. Normal human nasal epithelial (NHNE) cells and human lung mucoepidermoid carcinoma cell line (NCI-H292) were used. Sinus mucosa from patients was also tested. Anoxic condition was in an anaerobic chamber with a 95% N(2)/5% CO(2) atmosphere. The regulatory mechanism of MUC5AC by anoxia was investigated using RT-PCR, real-time PCR, western blot, ChIP, electrophoretic mobility shift, and luciferase assay. We show that levels of MUC5AC mRNA and the corresponding secreted protein increase in anoxic cultured NHNE cells. The major transcription factor for hypoxia-related signaling, HIF-1α, is induced during hypoxia, and transfection of a mammalian expression vector encoding HIF-1α results in increased MUC5AC mRNA levels under normoxic conditions. Moreover, hypoxia-induced expression of MUC5AC mRNA is down-regulated by transfected HIF-1α siRNA. We found increased MUC5AC promoter activity under anoxic conditions, as indicated by a luciferase reporter assay, and mutation of the putative hypoxia-response element in MUC5AC promoter attenuated this activity. Binding of over-expressed HIF-1α to the hypoxia-response element in the MUC5AC promoter was confirmed. In human sinusitis mucosa, which is supposed to be hypoxic, expression of MUC5AC and HIF-1α is higher than in control mucosa. CONCLUSION: The results indicate that anoxia up-regulates MUC5AC by the HIF-1α signaling pathway in human nasal epithelia and suggest that hypoxia might be a pathogenic mechanism of mucus hypersecretion in sinusitis.
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spelling pubmed-40264852014-05-21 Hypoxia-Mediated Mechanism of MUC5AC Production in Human Nasal Epithelia and Its Implication in Rhinosinusitis Kim, Yoon-Ju Cho, Hyung-Ju Shin, Woo-Chul Song, Hyun-Ah Yoon, Joo-Heon Kim, Chang-Hoon PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Excessive mucus production is typical in various upper airway diseases. In sinusitis, the expression of MUC5AC, a major respiratory mucin gene, increases. However, the mechanisms leading to mucus hypersecretion in sinusitis have not been characterized. Hypoxia due to occlusion of the sinus ostium is one of the major pathologic mechanisms of sinusitis, but there have been no reports regarding the mechanism of hypoxia-induced mucus hypersecretion. METHODS AND FINDINGS: This study aims to identify whether hypoxia may induce mucus hypersecretion and elucidate its mechanism. Normal human nasal epithelial (NHNE) cells and human lung mucoepidermoid carcinoma cell line (NCI-H292) were used. Sinus mucosa from patients was also tested. Anoxic condition was in an anaerobic chamber with a 95% N(2)/5% CO(2) atmosphere. The regulatory mechanism of MUC5AC by anoxia was investigated using RT-PCR, real-time PCR, western blot, ChIP, electrophoretic mobility shift, and luciferase assay. We show that levels of MUC5AC mRNA and the corresponding secreted protein increase in anoxic cultured NHNE cells. The major transcription factor for hypoxia-related signaling, HIF-1α, is induced during hypoxia, and transfection of a mammalian expression vector encoding HIF-1α results in increased MUC5AC mRNA levels under normoxic conditions. Moreover, hypoxia-induced expression of MUC5AC mRNA is down-regulated by transfected HIF-1α siRNA. We found increased MUC5AC promoter activity under anoxic conditions, as indicated by a luciferase reporter assay, and mutation of the putative hypoxia-response element in MUC5AC promoter attenuated this activity. Binding of over-expressed HIF-1α to the hypoxia-response element in the MUC5AC promoter was confirmed. In human sinusitis mucosa, which is supposed to be hypoxic, expression of MUC5AC and HIF-1α is higher than in control mucosa. CONCLUSION: The results indicate that anoxia up-regulates MUC5AC by the HIF-1α signaling pathway in human nasal epithelia and suggest that hypoxia might be a pathogenic mechanism of mucus hypersecretion in sinusitis. Public Library of Science 2014-05-19 /pmc/articles/PMC4026485/ /pubmed/24840724 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0098136 Text en © 2014 Kim et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kim, Yoon-Ju
Cho, Hyung-Ju
Shin, Woo-Chul
Song, Hyun-Ah
Yoon, Joo-Heon
Kim, Chang-Hoon
Hypoxia-Mediated Mechanism of MUC5AC Production in Human Nasal Epithelia and Its Implication in Rhinosinusitis
title Hypoxia-Mediated Mechanism of MUC5AC Production in Human Nasal Epithelia and Its Implication in Rhinosinusitis
title_full Hypoxia-Mediated Mechanism of MUC5AC Production in Human Nasal Epithelia and Its Implication in Rhinosinusitis
title_fullStr Hypoxia-Mediated Mechanism of MUC5AC Production in Human Nasal Epithelia and Its Implication in Rhinosinusitis
title_full_unstemmed Hypoxia-Mediated Mechanism of MUC5AC Production in Human Nasal Epithelia and Its Implication in Rhinosinusitis
title_short Hypoxia-Mediated Mechanism of MUC5AC Production in Human Nasal Epithelia and Its Implication in Rhinosinusitis
title_sort hypoxia-mediated mechanism of muc5ac production in human nasal epithelia and its implication in rhinosinusitis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4026485/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24840724
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0098136
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