학술논문

Circulating hyaluronic acid signature in CAP and ARDS – the role of pneumolysin in hyaluronic acid shedding.
Document Type
Article
Source
Matrix Biology. Dec2022, Vol. 114, p67-83. 17p.
Subject
*EXOTOXIN
*HYALURONIC acid
*ADULT respiratory distress syndrome
*BASAL lamina
*COMMUNITY-acquired pneumonia
*REACTIVE oxygen species
*PULSATILE flow
Language
ISSN
0945-053X
Abstract
• Soluble HA levels are elevated in CAP and ARDS plasma and are associated with an increase in 28-day mortality. • Soluble HA levels correlate with disease severity and markers of inflammation, endothelial cell activation, and basement membrane destruction. • Small and large HA fragments are detected in plasma of most severe CAP or ARDS patients. • Pneumolysin induces HA release from human pulmonary microvascular endothelial cells. • Pneumolysin-induced HA shedding is dependent on reactive oxygen species production and is not associated with endothelial barrier dysfunction. Shedding of hyaluronan (HA), the component of endothelial cell (EC) glycocalyx, has been associated with acute lung injury. HA degradation allows plasma proteins and fluid to penetrate across the vascular wall leading to lung edema formation and leukocyte recruitment. Here, we analyzed sHA levels and size in patients with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), correlated them to disease severity, and evaluated the impact of pneumolysin (PLY), the Streptococcus pneumoniae (S.p.) exotoxin, on HA shedding from human pulmonary microvascular EC (HPMVEC). sHA levels were elevated in CAP and ARDS and correlated with the CRB65 severity score and with markers of inflammation (interleukin-6), EC activation (E-selectin), and basement membrane destruction (collagen IV). Furthermore, sHA levels were associated with an increase in 28-day mortality. Small and large sHA fragments were detected in plasma of most severe CAP or ARDS patients, and the presence of large sHA fragments was accompanied by the elevated levels of circulating collagen IV. In vitro, PLY induced sHA release from HPMVEC. This effect was dependent on reactive oxygen species (ROS) production and was not associated with endothelial barrier dysfunction. Conversely, HA shedding was impaired following HPMVEC infection with a S.p. PLY-deficient mutant. Our study identifies association between the severity of CAP and ARDS and the levels and size of sHA in plasma. It links sHA levels with, inflammation, EC activation status and basement membrane disassembly in ARDS and provides insights into the mechanism of HA shedding during infection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]