iScience (Oct 2021)

RSV infection-elicited high MMP-12–producing macrophages exacerbate allergic airway inflammation with neutrophil infiltration

  • Airi Makino,
  • Takehiko Shibata,
  • Mashiro Nagayasu,
  • Ikuo Hosoya,
  • Toshiyo Nishimura,
  • Chihiro Nakano,
  • Kisaburo Nagata,
  • Toshihiro Ito,
  • Yoshimasa Takahashi,
  • Shigeki Nakamura

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 10
p. 103201

Abstract

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Summary: Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection often exacerbates bronchial asthma, but there is no licensed RSV vaccine or specific treatments. Here we show that RSV-induced alveolar macrophages, which produce high levels of matrix metalloproteinase-12 (MMP-12), exacerbate allergic airway inflammation with increased neutrophil infiltration. When mice subjected to allergic airway inflammation via exposure to the house dust mite antigen (HDM) were infected with RSV (HDM/RSV), MMP-12 expression, viral load, neutrophil infiltration, and airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR) were increased compared to those in the HDM and RSV groups. These exacerbations in the HDM/RSV group were attenuated in MMP-12-deficient mice and mice treated with MMP408, a selective MMP-12 inhibitor, but not in mice treated with dexamethasone. Finally, M2-like macrophages produced MMP-12, and its production was promoted by increase of IFN-β-induced IL-4 receptor expression with RSV infection. Thus, targeting MMP-12 represents a potentially novel therapeutic strategy for the exacerbation of asthma.

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