학술논문

The Role of Interleukin-1β in Murine Cigarette Smoke-Induced Emphysema and Small Airway Remodeling
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology. Apr 01, 2009 40(4):482-490
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
1044-1549
Abstract
Interleukin-1β (IL-1β), a proinflammatory cytokine, is elevated in cigarette smokers. To determine whether IL-1β plays a role in the pathogenesis of cigarette smoke-induced emphysema and small airway remodeling, IL-1 receptor knockout (IL1RKO), TNF-α receptor knockout (TNFRKO), or C57Bl/6 (control) mice were exposed to cigarette smoke acutely or for up to 6 months. With a single acute exposure, smoke elevated IL-1β in C57Bl/6 mice. IL1RKO mice were protected against acute smoke-mediated increases in lavage inflammatory cells and matrix breakdown. In C57Bl/6 mice, acute smoke-mediated increases in inflammatory cells, serum IL-1β, and serum TNF-α were blocked by z-VAD-fmk, a pan-caspase inhibitor, or z-WEHD-fmk, a caspase-1 (IL-1-converting enzyme, [ICE]) inhibitor. With 6 months of exposure, IL-1β was no longer increased, but IL-18 was elevated. After 6 months of exposure, IL1RKO mice were 65% protected against emphysema, whereas TNFRKO mice were 83% protected. Both strains were completely protected against small airway remodeling. Lavage desmosine, hydroxyproline, and hyaluronan, matrix breakdown markers, were elevated in C57 but not IL1RKO mice. We conclude that IL-1β plays a significant role in induction of murine emphysema and small airway remodeling, and is comparable to TNF-α in its effects. The protective effects of caspase inhibitors appear to be related to inhibition of ICE and raise the question of whether models that ameliorate emphysema with caspase inhibitors are really blocking IL-1β (and IL-18) activation rather than blocking apoptosis.