Abstract

Airway smooth muscle cells (ASMC) play a key role in bronchial hyperresponsiveness (BHR). A major component of the signalling cascade leading to ASMC contraction is calcium. T-bet knock-out (KO) mice show the key features of allergic asthma such as a shift towards T (H2)-lymphocytes and display a broad spectrum of asthma-like histological and functional characteristics. In this study, we aimed at investigating whether Ca (2+)-homeostasis of ASMC is altered in T-bet KO-mice as an experimental model of asthma. Lung slices of 100 to 200 microm thickness were obtained from T-bet KO- and wild-type mice. Airway contractions in response to acetylcholine (ACH) were measured by video-microscopy and Ca (2+)-signaling in single ASMC of lung slices was assessed using two-photon microscopy. Airways from T-bet KO-mice showed increased baseline airway tone (BAT) and BHR compared to those of wild-type mice. The increased BAT was correlated with an increased incidence of spontaneous changes in intracellular Ca (2+)-concentrations, whereas BHR correlated with higher ACH-induced Ca (2+)-transients and an increased proportion of ASMC showing Ca (2+)-oscillations. Emptying intracellular Ca (2+)-stores using caffeine or cyclopiazonic acid induced higher Ca (2+)-elevations in ASMC from T-bet KO compared to wild-type mice. Altered Ca (2+)-homeostasis of ASMC contributes to increased BAT and BHR in lung slices from T-bet KO mice as a murine asthma model. We propose that a higher Ca (2+)-content of the intracellular Ca (2+)-stores is involved in the pathophysiology of these changes.

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