Andrew M. Mikosz,Kevin Ni,Fabienne Gally,Katherine Pratte,Seth Winfree,Qiong Lin,I. Echelman,Brianna Wetmore,Danting Cao,Matthew J. Justice,Robert A. Sandhaus,Lisa A. Maier,Charlie Strange,Russell P. Bowler,Irina Petrache,Karina A. Serban
出处
期刊:American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology [American Physiological Society] 日期:2023-10-10卷期号:325 (6): L711-L725被引量:4
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is characterized by nonresolving inflammation fueled by breach in the endothelial barrier and leukocyte recruitment into the airspaces. Among the ligand-receptor axes that control leukocyte recruitment, the full-length fractalkine ligand (CX3CL1)-receptor (CX3CR1) ensures homeostatic endothelial-leukocyte interactions. Cigarette smoke (CS) exposure and respiratory pathogens increase expression of endothelial sheddases, such as a-disintegrin-and-metalloproteinase-domain 17 (ADAM17, TACE), inhibited by the anti-protease α-1 antitrypsin (AAT). In the systemic endothelium, TACE cleaves CX3CL1 to release soluble CX3CL1 (sCX3CL1). During CS exposure, it is not known whether AAT inhibits sCX3CL1 shedding and CX3CR1