Abstract
Bacterial and viral respiratory infections can initiate acute lung injury and acute respiratory distress syndrome. Neutrophils and their granule enzymes, including neutrophil elastase, are key mediators of the pathophysiology of acute respiratory failure. Although intracellular neutrophil elastase functions as a host defensive factor against pathogens, its leakage into airway spaces induces degradation of host connective tissue components. This leakage disrupts host innate immune responses via proteolytic cleavage of Toll-like receptors and cytokines. Here, we investigated whether neutrophils possess proteases that cleave adaptive immune molecules. We found that expression of the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class II molecule HLA-DP β1 was decreased in THP-1-derived macrophages treated with supernatants from dead neutrophils. This decreased HLA-DP β1 expression was counteracted by treatment with neutrophil elastase inhibitor, suggesting proteolytic cleavage of HLA-DP β1 by neutrophil elastase. SDS-PAGE showed that neutrophil elastase cleaved recombinant HLA-DP α1, -DP β1, -DQ α1, -DQ β1, -DR α, and -DR β1. Neutrophil elastase also cleaved HLA-DP β1 on extracellular vesicles isolated from macrophages without triggering morphological changes. Thus, leakage of neutrophil elastase may disrupt innate immune responses, antigen presentation, and T cell activation. Additionally, inhibition of neutrophil elastase is a potential therapeutic option for treating bacterial and viral pneumonia.
Highlights
Acute lung injury (ALI) and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) are life-threatening diseases in critically ill patients and represent a spectrum of progressive respiratory failure affecting approximately 200,000 patients, causing 75,000 deaths annually, in the United S tates[1]
Primary isolated human neutrophils were pretreated with PLY; the supernatant from dead neutrophils was added to THP-1-derived macrophages
Our findings suggest that Human neutrophil elastase (hNE) in the supernatant from PLY-treated neutrophils cleaves human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-DP β1 on macrophages
Summary
Acute lung injury (ALI) and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) are life-threatening diseases in critically ill patients and represent a spectrum of progressive respiratory failure affecting approximately 200,000 patients, causing 75,000 deaths annually, in the United S tates[1]. These conditions are characterized by severe hypoxemia, hypercapnia, diffuse alveolar infiltrates on chest radiographs, and a substantial reduction in pulmonary compliance[2]. Excessive activation of alveolar neutrophils is thought to play a crucial role in these lung diseases, the pathogenicity of these cells has rarely been studied. The main objective of this study was to investigate the effect of supernatants from dead neutrophils on MHC class II expression on macrophages
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