Abstract

Patients with eosinophilic asthma react well to conventional treatment of asthma while individualized therapy for non-eosinophilic endotypes have yet to be developed. Dysregulated sphingosine metabolites are associated with the pathophysiology of different asthma endotypes with their receptors involved. However, whether the sphingosine-1-phosphate receptor 4 (S1PR4) contributes to disease progression of asthma remains underappreciated. In this study, we demonstrated that sphingosine metabolism was disturbed in asthma while it could not be used to distinguish between different endotypes of asthma. S1PR4, a vital receptor of bioactive sphingosine metabolites and mainly expressed in macrophages, exhibited lower expression both in patients and experimental mice with neutrophilic airway inflammation. Additionally, S1pr4 deficiency aggravated the OVA/LPS-induced pulmonary inflammation in mice along with a significant up-regulation in M1 macrophage activation. Mechanistic studies showed that S1PR4 was strongly connected to bioactive oxylipins concurrent with bounding to formyl peptide receptor 2 to influence the phosphorylation of JNK and contributed to the macrophage M1 program, which in turn secreted amounts of inflammatory cytokines associated to the inflammatory response of neutrophilic asthma. Furthermore, treating mice with S1PR4 agonist CYM50308 was characterized by less pulmonary inflammatory infiltration. Our research indicates S1PR4 a promising therapeutic target for non-eosinophilic phenotypes of asthma.

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