Abstract

Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) involves damage to lungs causing an influx of neutrophils from the blood into the lung airspaces, and the neutrophils causing further damage, which attracts more neutrophils in a vicious cycle. There are ∼190,000 cases of ARDS per year in the US, and because of the lack of therapeutics, the mortality rate is ∼40%. Repelling neutrophils out of the lung airspaces, or simply preventing neutrophil entry, is a potential therapeutic. In this minireview, we discuss how our lab noticed that a protein called AprA secreted by growing Dictyostelium cells functions as a repellent for Dictyostelium cells, causing cells to move away from a source of AprA. We then found that AprA has structural similarity to a human secreted protein called dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPPIV), and that DPPIV is a repellent for human neutrophils. In animal models of ARDS, inhalation of DPPIV or DPPIV mimetics blocks neutrophil influx into the lungs. To move DPPIV or DPPIV mimetics into the clinic, we need to know how this repulsion works to understand possible drug interactions and side effects. Combining biochemistry and genetics in Dictyostelium to elucidate the AprA signal transduction pathway, followed by drug studies in human neutrophils to determine similarities and differences between neutrophil and Dictyostelium chemorepulsion, will hopefully lead to the safe use of DPPIV or DPPIV mimetics in the clinic.

Highlights

  • Specialty section: This article was submitted to Molecular Medicine, a section of the journal Frontiers in Cell and Developmental

  • Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) involves damage to lungs causing an influx of neutrophils from the blood into the lung airspaces, and the neutrophils causing further damage, which attracts more neutrophils in a vicious cycle

  • We found that autocrine proliferation repressor A (AprA) has structural similarity to a human secreted protein called dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPPIV), and that DPPIV is a repellent for human neutrophils

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Summary

CHEMOREPULSION CAN CAUSE CELLS TO MOVE AWAY FROM A SIGNAL

Chemotaxis allows migratory cells to either move toward (chemoattract) or move away (chemorepel) from an external chemotactic stimulus (Figure 2; Vianello et al, 2005). Chemoattraction plays important roles during development and morphogenesis, and in immune responses (Sadik and Luster, 2012; Kolaczkowska and Kubes, 2013; Theveneau and Mayor, 2013). Chemorepulsion can direct filament growth and mat formation (Karunanithi et al, 2012)

SEVERAL PROTEINS ACT AS NEURONAL CHEMOREPELLENTS
SEVERAL PROTEINS ACT AS IMMUNE CELL CHEMOREPELLENTS
EUKARYOTIC CHEMOREPULSION INVOLVES REGULATION OF THE CYTOSKELETON
Dictyostelium discoideum SECRETES AN ENDOGENOUS CHEMOREPELLENT CALLED AprA
AprA ACTIVATES A COMPLEX SIGNAL TRANSDUCTION PATHWAY TO INDUCE CHEMOREPULSION
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