Abstract

BackgroundNicotine plays an important role in cigarette-smoke-associated airway disease. The present study was designed to examine if nicotine could induce airway hyperresponsiveness through kinin receptors, and if so, explore the underlying mechanisms involved.MethodsMurine tracheal segments were cultured for 1, 2 or 4 days in serum-free DMEM medium in presence of nicotine (1 and 10 μM) or vehicle (DMSO). Contractile responses induced by kinin B1 receptor agonist, des-Arg9-bradykinin, and B2 receptor agonist, bradykinin, were monitored with myographs. The B1 and B2 receptor mRNA expressions were semi-quantified using real-time PCR and their corresponding protein expressions assessed with confocal-microscopy-based immunohistochemistry. Various pharmacological inhibitors were used for studying intracellular signaling pathways.ResultsFour days of organ culture with nicotine concentration-dependently increased kinin B1 and B2 receptor-mediated airway contractions, without altering the kinin receptor-mediated relaxations. No such increase was seen at day 1 or day 2. The airway contractile responses to 5-HT, acetylcholine and endothelin receptor agonists remained unaffected by nicotine. Two different neuronal nicotinic receptor antagonists MG624 and hexamethonium blocked the nicotine-induced effects. The enhanced contractile responses were accompanied by increased mRNA and protein expression for both kinin receptors, suggesting the involvement of transcriptional mechanisms. Confocal-microscopy-based immunohistochemistry showed that 4 days of nicotine treatment induced activation (phosphorylation) of c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK), but not extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1 and 2 (ERK1/2) and p38. Inhibition of JNK with its specific inhibitor SP600125 abolished the nicotine-induced effects on kinin receptor-mediated contractions and reverted the enhanced receptor mRNA expression. Administration of phosphodiesterase inhibitors (YM976 and theophylline), glucocorticoid (dexamethasone) or adenylcyclase activator (forskolin) suppressed the nicotine-enhanced airway contractile response to des-Arg9-bradykinin and bradykinin.ConclusionsNicotine induces airway hyperresponsiveness via transcriptional up-regulation of airway kinin B1 and B2 receptors, an effect mediated via neuronal nicotinic receptors. The underlying molecular mechanisms involve activation of JNK- and PDE4-mediated intracellular inflammatory signal pathways. Our results might be relevant to active and passive smokers suffering from airway hyperresponsiveness, and suggest new therapeutic targets for the treatment of smoke-associated airway disease.

Highlights

  • Airway hyperreactivity is a major feature of asthma and a consequence of airway inflammation

  • Effects of nicotine on kinin B1 and B2 receptor-mediated airway contractions In order to assess the time-course of nicotine effects on the airway contraction, tracheal segments were organcultured for 1, 2 or 4 days in the presence of nicotine (10 μM) or vehicle

  • The presented study demonstrated for the first time that long-term exposure of mouse tracheal segments to nicotine causes a concentration-dependent increase of kinin B1 and B2 receptor-mediated airway contractions

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Summary

Introduction

Airway hyperreactivity is a major feature of asthma and a consequence of airway inflammation. It is well-known that both active [1,2] and passive cigarette smoke exposure [3,4] can cause airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR). In vivo studies in guinea pigs have demonstrated that chronic exposure to tobacco smoke selectively increases airway reactivity to bradykinin and capsaicin, without altering responses to methacholine or histamine [8]. This suggests an important role for bradykinin in tobacco smoke-induced AHR. The present study was designed to examine if nicotine could induce airway hyperresponsiveness through kinin receptors, and if so, explore the underlying mechanisms involved

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