Nature Communications (Jan 2021)

Disulfide disruption reverses mucus dysfunction in allergic airway disease

  • Leslie E. Morgan,
  • Ana M. Jaramillo,
  • Siddharth K. Shenoy,
  • Dorota Raclawska,
  • Nkechinyere A. Emezienna,
  • Vanessa L. Richardson,
  • Naoko Hara,
  • Anna Q. Harder,
  • James C. NeeDell,
  • Corinne E. Hennessy,
  • Hassan M. El-Batal,
  • Chelsea M. Magin,
  • Diane E. Grove Villalon,
  • Gregg Duncan,
  • Justin S. Hanes,
  • Jung Soo Suk,
  • David J. Thornton,
  • Fernando Holguin,
  • William J. Janssen,
  • William R. Thelin,
  • Christopher M. Evans

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-20499-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

Read online

In asthma, mucus plugging is an important cause of airflow obstruction, but it is not targeted by widely used bronchodilator and anti-inflammatory drugs. Here the authors show that reduction of disulfide bonds that hold mucin polymers together reverses asthma-like obstruction in mice.