Experimental and Molecular Medicine (Feb 2020)

Osteopontin contributes to late-onset asthma phenotypes in adult asthma patients

  • Hoang Kim Tu Trinh,
  • Thuy Van Thao Nguyen,
  • Seo-Hee Kim,
  • Thi Bich Tra Cao,
  • Quoc Quang Luu,
  • Seung-Hyun Kim,
  • Hae-Sim Park

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s12276-020-0376-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 52, no. 2
pp. 253 – 265

Abstract

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Asthma: Inflammatory protein drives adult-onset disease Aging and viral infections in older individuals may combine to spur the release of an inflammatory protein implicated in late-onset asthma. A team led by Hae-Sim Park from Ajou University School of Medicine, Suwon, South Korea, showed that people who develop asthma after age 40 have higher blood levels of osteopontin, a multifunctional protein with roles in airway inflammation and tissue remodeling, than people who develop asthma at a younger age or healthy individuals. The researchers developed two ovalbumin-induced asthma models in younger and older mice, and found that older mice developed more severe airway hyperresponsiveness with higher levels of osteopontin, among other inflammatory markers, which were emnhanced by viral infection. Drug therapies that target osteopontin signaling could help combat the late-onset asthma.