Cell Reports (Aug 2024)

Airway extracellular LTA4H concentrations are governed by release from liver hepatocytes and changes in lung vascular permeability

  • Kyle T. Mincham,
  • Samia Akthar,
  • Dhiren F. Patel,
  • Garance F. Meyer,
  • Clare M. Lloyd,
  • Amit Gaggar,
  • James E. Blalock,
  • Robert J. Snelgrove

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 43, no. 8
p. 114630

Abstract

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Summary: Leukotriene A4 hydrolase (LTA4H) is a bifunctional enzyme, with dual activities critical in defining the scale of tissue inflammation and pathology. LTA4H classically operates intracellularly, primarily within myeloid cells, to generate pro-inflammatory leukotriene B4. However, LTA4H also operates extracellularly to degrade the bioactive collagen fragment proline-glycine-proline to limit neutrophilic inflammation and pathological tissue remodeling. While the dichotomous functions of LTA4H are dictated by location, the cellular source of extracellular enzyme remains unknown. We demonstrate that airway extracellular LTA4H concentrations are governed by the level of pulmonary vascular permeability and influx of an abundant repository of blood-borne enzyme. In turn, blood LTA4H originates from liver hepatocytes, being released constitutively but further upregulated during an acute phase response. These findings have implications for our understanding of how inflammation and repair are regulated and how perturbations to the LTA4H axis may manifest in pathologies of chronic diseases.

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