Abstract

Exacerbations of muco-obstructive airway diseases such as COPD and asthma are associated with epithelial changes termed mucous metaplasia (MM). Many molecular pathways triggering MM have been identified; however, the factors that regulate resolution are less well understood. We hypothesized that the autophagy pathway is required for resolution of MM by eliminating excess non-secreted intracellular mucin granules. We found increased intracellular levels of mucins Muc5ac and Muc5b in mice deficient in autophagy regulatory protein, Atg16L1, and that this difference was not due to defects in the known baseline or stimulated mucin secretion pathways. Instead, we found that, in mucous secretory cells, Lc3/Lamp1 vesicles colocalized with mucin granules particularly adjacent to the nucleus, suggesting that some granules were being eliminated in the autophagy pathway rather than secreted. Using a mouse model of MM resolution, we found increased lysosomal proteolytic activity that peaked in the days after mucin production began to decline. In purified lysosomal fractions, Atg16L1-deficient mice had reduced proteolytic degradation of Lc3 and Sqstm1 and persistent accumulation of mucin granules associated with impaired resolution of mucous metaplasia. In normal and COPD derived human airway epithelial cells (AECs), activation of autophagy by mTOR inhibition led to a reduction of intracellular mucin granules in AECs. Our findings indicate that during peak and resolution phases of MM, autophagy activity rather than secretion is required for elimination of some remaining mucin granules. Manipulation of autophagy activation offers a therapeutic target to speed resolution of MM in airway disease exacerbations.

Highlights

  • Exacerbations of muco-obstructive airway diseases such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and asthma are associated with epithelial changes termed mucous metaplasia (MM)

  • In muco-obstructive airway diseases such as asthma, COPD, cystic fibrosis (CF), and non-CF bronchiectasis, increased MUC5AC production in response to inflammatory stimuli leads to extensive changes of the airway epithelium, termed mucous metaplasia (MM) marked by enlargement of secretory cells with increased intracellular staining of MUC5AC granules

  • We previously showed that there were increased intracellular MUC5AC-positive granules when autophagy protein, ATG5, was depleted by shRNA in human airway epithelial cells (AECs) cultured with IL-137

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Summary

Introduction

Exacerbations of muco-obstructive airway diseases such as COPD and asthma are associated with epithelial changes termed mucous metaplasia (MM). W­ e7,8, and ­others[9,10,11,12,13], have observed that autophagy protein markers are increased in models of human airway disease, and in asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) airways This led us to infer that autophagy played a key role in the response of the epithelium to airway inflammation. In muco-obstructive airway diseases such as asthma, COPD, cystic fibrosis (CF), and non-CF bronchiectasis, increased MUC5AC production in response to inflammatory stimuli leads to extensive changes of the airway epithelium, termed mucous metaplasia (MM) marked by enlargement of secretory cells with increased intracellular staining of MUC5AC granules. We show that mice globally deficient in the autophagy regulatory protein, Atg16L1, have increased Lc3 II and Sqstm[1] in the lysosome compartment and higher levels of mucin granules in both intracellular and lysosome enrich preparations during resolution of mucous metaplasia. This indicates that the autophagy-lysosome pathway is required to resolve airway mucous metaplasia by removing excess mucin granules

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