Abstract
Objective and design
Our aim was to study whether an extracellular, oxidative antimicrobial mechanism inherent to tracheal epithelial cells is capable of inactivating influenza H1N2 virus.
Material or subjects
Epithelial cells were isolated from tracheas of male Sprague–Dawley rats. Both primary human and rat tracheobronchial epithelial cells were differentiated in air–liquid interface cultures.
Treatment
A/swine/Illinois/02860/09 (swH1N2) influenza A virions were added to the apical side of airway cells for 1 h in the presence or absence of lactoperoxidase or thiocyanate.
Methods
Characterization of rat epithelial cells (morphology, Duox expression) occurred via western blotting, PCR, hydrogen peroxide production measurement and histology. The number of viable virions was determined by plaque assays. Statistical difference of the results was analyzed by ANOVA and Tukey’s test.
Results
Our data show that rat tracheobronchial epithelial cells develop a differentiated, polarized monolayer with high transepithelial electrical resistance, mucin production and expression of dual oxidases. Influenza A virions are inactivated by human and rat epithelial cells via a dual oxidase-, lactoperoxidase- and thiocyanate-dependent mechanism.
Conclusions
Differentiated air–liquid interface cultures of rat tracheal epithelial cells provide a novel model to study airway epithelium–influenza interactions. The dual oxidase/lactoperoxidase/thiocyanate extracellular oxidative system producing hypothiocyanite is a fast and potent anti-influenza mechanism inactivating H1N2 viruses prior to infection of the epithelium.
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Introduction
Tracheobronchial epithelial cells (TBECs) in the airways provide the first line of defense against inhaled pathogenic infectious agents [1]. The respiratory epithelium alerts the innate immune system to initiate inflammation [1]. TBECs themselves are capable of fighting pathogens by producing reactive oxygen species, mucins and antimicrobial peptides [1–4]. TBECs orchestrate an oxidative extracellular antiviral system present in the airway surface liquid consisting of the protein lactoperoxidase (LPO), the thiocyanate anion (SCN−) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) [5–7]. LPO and SCN− are both present in large quantities in the airway surface liquid [6, 7]. LPO oxidizes SCN− using H2O2 into hypothiocyanite (OSCN−), which has demonstrated antimicrobial effects [8–11]. This antimicrobial system was originally described in milk and saliva [8, 9, 11], and only recently in the airways [5, 6, 12, 13].
Cellular H2O2 is derived from two NADPH oxidases highly expressed in TBECs: dual oxidase 1 and 2 (Duox1 and Duox2) [5, 14, 15]. Duox1 and Duox2 are the most likely candidates to provide H2O2 for the H2O2/LPO/SCN− antimicrobial system since these enzymes are the dominant NADPH oxidases expressed in TBECs [5, 16, 17], and are ideally localized to the apical membrane to produce extracellular H2O2 into the airway surface liquid [5, 18]. The H2O2/LPO/SCN− antimicrobial system is effective against several microbes including viruses [19, 20]. Its virucidal effects have been described for HIV and RSV, but not for other viruses including influenza [19, 20].
Influenza A virus (IAV) causes yearly epidemics with high morbidity and deaths in humans [21, 22]. IAVs have several subtypes that are classified based on their hemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA) surface proteins [23]. The IAV subtypes most commonly infecting humans are H1N1, H1N2 and H3N2 [23]. A recent study showed that enzyme-free OSCN− has antiviral activity against a pandemic influenza strain (A/H1N1/2009) [24]. Different IAV subtypes (H1N1, H3N2) were shown to elicit discrete responses (Duox upregulation) in TBECs [25]. These data suggest that the Duox/H2O2/LPO/SCN− system in TBECs represents a potent anti-influenza mechanism of the respiratory innate immune system [24, 25]. The potential role of the H2O2/LPO/SCN− antimicrobial system in inactivation of the IAV subtype H1N2 has yet to be determined. H1N2 viruses represent a serious public health problem in humans and swines [26]. The H1N2 IAV subtype resulted from reassortment between H1N1 and H3N2 subtypes [27] and are endemic in the USA [28].
The purpose of this study was to determine whether TBECs are capable of inactivating extracellular IAV virions of the H1N2 subtype by the Duox/H2O2/LPO/SCN− system. Air–liquid interface (ALI) cultures of polarized, differentiated TBECs provide the best in vitro model of the respiratory epithelium. These cultures develop transepithelial electric resistance (TEER); contain ciliated, goblet and basal cells; produce mucins; and release cytokines upon microbial stimulus [16, 17, 29–33]. We and others have also shown that human TBECs express Duox at their later, differentiated stage in ALI cultures [16, 17, 25, 34]. Human TBECs are difficult to obtain, are costly and exhibit large donor-to-donor variation. For this reason, we established a complementary model: ALI cultures of primary rat TBECs. Rat cells are easier to isolate, cost-effective, less prone to variations and suitable for larger-scale studies; therefore, rat TBECs provide an excellent alternative to study human TBECs in vitro [35].
In this article, we provide detailed characterization of ALI cultures of primary rat TBECs. Rat cells express both, Duox1 and Duox2, and produce extracellular H2O2 in a calcium-dependent manner. We also show that rat TBECs inactivate H1N2 IAV to a remarkable extent by the H2O2/LPO/SCN− system. These data were further confirmed using ALI cultures of normal human bronchial epithelium (NHBE). In summary, our data establish rat TBECs as a model to study influenza–Duox interactions and show for the first time that H1N2 subtype of IAV is efficiently inactivated by the Duox/H2O2/LPO/SCN− antiviral system.
Materials and methods
Animals
Male Sprague–Dawley rats were purchased from Harlan Laboratories (South Easton, MA). The animals were between 15 and 20 weeks old at the time of euthanasia via CO2. All animal-related procedures were approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee of the University of Georgia (Rada, IACUC protocol numbers: A2012 11-004-Y2-A1, A2015 03-030-Y1-A0.)
Culture of primary human and rat airway epithelial cells
Primary normal human bronchial epithelial (NHBE) cells were purchased from Lonza (Walkersville, MD) and cultured as previously described [17]. Briefly, cells were seeded onto 24-well polyester (0.4-micron pore) membrane transwells (Costar), precoated with 0.3 % rat tail collagen I (Sigma), at a density of 2.0 × 104 cells/well. B-ALI™ growth medium was used in the apical and basal chambers until the cells reached confluence. The upper chamber medium was aspirated, and the lower medium was replaced with B-ALI™ differentiation medium (Lonza, Walkersville, MD). Cells were maintained on the air–liquid interface (ALI) for 4–5 weeks by feeding every other day with ALI differentiation medium (the surface of ALI cultures was washed with sterile HBSS every other day). Antibiotics (penicillin and streptomycin, Life Technologies, Grand Island, NY) were supplemented in the media up to 4 days before experiments.
Rat tracheas were removed under sterile conditions from male Sprague–Dawley rats. The tracheas were incubated overnight at 4 °C in Dulbecco’s modified Eagle’s medium (DMEM; Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO) and Ham’s nutrient F-12 medium (F-12; Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO) (1:1) with 5 % protease (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO). Fetal bovine serum 10 % (FBS; Hyclone, Logan, UT) was then added to the incubation medium (DMEM/F-12) and TBECs were flushed out. The cells were collected by centrifugation (450 g, 4 °C, 10 min) and were washed twice with DMEM/F-12 containing 10 % FBS. Growth medium for RTE cells consisted of DMEM/F-12 supplemented with 1 % l-glutamine, 1 % pen/strep, 10 µg/mL insulin, 0.1 µg/mL hydrocortisone, 0.1 µg/mL cholera toxin, 5 µg/mL transferrin, 5 µg/mL transferrin, 25 ng/mL epidermal growth factor (all reagents from Sigma), 1 % bovine pituitary extract (Life technologies), 3 mg/mL bovine serum albumin and 50 nM retinoic acid. Polyester permeable membranes on culture inserts (6.5 mm diameter, 0.4-µm pore size; Costar) were precoated with 100 μL 0.3 % rat tail collagen I (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO). Rat TBECs were plated onto the apical surface of the inserts with 0.2 mL of growth medium in the upper (apical) compartments of the culture plates (6.0 × 104 cells/membrane). Cultures were grown in 95 % air and 5 % CO2 at 37 °C. After 72 h, media in the apical chamber was changed. The medium was changed every other day using 0.5 and 0.2 mL growth medium in the basal and apical compartments, respectively. After 7 days, the cells were confluent [determined visually and by measuring transepithelial electrical resistance (TEER)]. The medium was removed from the apical chamber taking the cells to ALI. Medium in the basal chamber was changed every other day. Cells were cultured between 3 and 4 weeks on ALI when used for experiments. Four days prior to experiments, cells were given antibiotic-free medium. To characterize their morphology, rat TBEC cultures were fixed with 4 % paraformaldehyde (GE Healthcare Life Sciences, Pittsburgh, PA) and subjected to H&E and Mayer’s mucicarmine staining (detecting mucins) (UGA, Histology Laboratory, Athens, GA) (Fig. 1).
Influenza A virus
Madin-Darby canine kidney cells (MDCK) (ATCC CCL-34) were cultured in Dulbecco’s modified Eagle’s medium (DMEM) containing high glucose (HyClone, Logan, UT) supplemented with 5 % heat-inactivated fetal bovine serum (FBS) and maintained at 37 °C with 5 % CO2. A/swine/Illinois/02860/09 (swH1N2) IAV viral stocks were cultured in MDCK using infection medium (DMEM containing high glucose supplemented with 1 mM l-glutamine with 1-μg/mL tolylsulfonyl phenylalanyl chloromethyl ketone [TPCK]-treated trypsin).
Western blotting
NHBE cells were lysed by Nonidet P-40 lysis buffer (Boston Bioproducts, Ashland, MA) containing 150 μM PMSF and protease inhibitor cocktail (both from Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO) [17]. Protein levels were determined using the bicinchoninic acid assay (Pierce, Grand Island, NY). Lysates were electrophoresed on SDS–polyacrylamide gels (8 %; Tris–glycine gel, Life Technologies, Carlsbad, CA). Gels were blotted on nitrocellulose membrane using the iBlot dry blotting system (Life Technologies, Carlsbad, CA). Blots were blocked overnight in TTBS (TBS buffer containing 5 % milk powder and 0.05 % Tween 20). Blots were incubated with primary anti-Duox antibody (rabbit, polyclonal; 1/2000) [36] followed by incubation with secondary HRP-linked anti-rabbit IgG antibody (1/1000; GE Healthcare Life Sciences, Pittsburgh, PA). Blots were developed by chemiluminescence using the Lumigen DS detection kit (GE Healthcare Life Sciences, Pittsburgh, PA).
RNA isolation and RT-PCR
RNA was isolated from rat TBECs by RNAzol (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO)/chloroform extraction followed by isopropanol precipitation as described [37]. RNA concentrations and purities were determined using a Nanodrop spectrophotometer. cDNA synthesis was carried out with the Thermoscript cDNA synthesis kit using 1 μg total RNA, oligo dT primers and RNaseH treatment (Life Technologies, Carlsbad, CA). To detect duox1, duox2 and actin gene expressions, the following gene-specific primers were used in the PCR (PCR Thermocycler, Eppendorf, Hauppauge, NY): rat duox1 (F: CTGGAGCTCT CCGGGTTT, R: GGCACTGAGG AGGCTGACTA, product: 767 bp); rat duox2 (F: GGTGGAGATC AGTGTGGTGA, R: GCTAGGAAGC CCCTCTGC, product: 665 bp); rat actin (F: GGAAATGCAC TCCCTTGTGT, R: TGTTAGCTTT GGGGTTCAGG, product: 453 bp). PCR program: 94 °C (0.5 min), 62 °C (0.5 min), 72 °C (1.5 min), 37 cycles.
Measurement of H2O2 production
H2O2 production was measured in trypsinized and washed rat TBECs in suspension by horseradish peroxidase (HRP)-mediated oxidation of homovanillic acid (HVA) as previously described [16]. Fluorescence was measured using Varioskan Flash fluorescence microplate reader (ThermoScientific, Waltham, MA USA, excitation wavelength 320 nm, emission wavelength 405 nm) for 1 h taking readings every minute. H2O2 production was either expressed as relative fluorescence units (RFU) or calculated and expressed as nmol H2O2/h/106 cells.
Viral inactivation assay
After human or rat TBECs had been on ALI for the respective time, 4 days prior to use cells were switched to antibiotic-free medium and the apical chamber was washed with HBSS (Mediatech, Manassas, VA). Each component of the system was tested at the following concentrations: 100 μM ATP, 6.5 μg/mL LPO [13, 34], 400 μM SCN− (in HBSS as assay medium) (all reagents were from Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO). The reaction volume was set to 40 μL with the appropriate concentration of each component. Viral suspensions were diluted to an MOI (multiplicity of infection, IAV/TBEC) of 0.1 (NHBE cells ~5000 viral particles/transwell, rat TBECs ~8000 viral particles/transwell). Catalase (15,000 U/mL, Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO) was also used to inhibit the system. Once the components were assembled, the 40 μL volume was pipetted to the apical chamber of the transwell and placed in a 37 °C 5 % CO2 incubator. After 1 h, supernatants from each respective well were collected and stored at −80 °C. Plaque assays were performed to determine viral concentrations as previously described [26].
Statistics
Data for the viral inactivation assay were log-transformed, and significance was calculated using one-way ANOVA and Tukey’s test performed using Minitab 17. Graphs were prepared using Excel or GraphPad Prism softwares. * p < 0.05; ** p < 0.01; *** p < 0.001.
Results
Characterization of ALI cultures of differentiated rat TBECs
Recently published results suggest that the Duox/H2O2/LPO/SCN− system responds to H1N1 and H3N2 subtypes of IAV [24, 25]. Whether the third IAV subtype commonly infecting humans, H1N2, can be inactivated by TBECs is unknown. To address this, we used ALI cultures of primary, differentiated rat TBECs as an in vitro model to study epithelium–influenza interactions. Rat TBECs were cultured on ALI (Fig. 1 scheme) in 24-well transwells for 3 weeks and subjected to different assays to characterize them. Hematoxylin and eosin staining revealed that TBECs formed the characteristic monolayer containing polarized epithelial cells with apical cilia (Fig. 1a). Beating cilia can be observed (data not shown). Basal cells near the transwell membrane support can be visualized (Fig. 1a). Mayer’s mucicarmine staining detecting mucins as large glycoproteins identified positively stained (purple), mucin-producing goblet cells (Fig. 1b). Unstained polarized cells are ciliated epithelial cells (Fig. 1b). Differentiated TBECs develop high transepithelial electric resistance (TEER) suggesting formation of tight junctions [38]. Figure 1c shows the time-dependent development of high TEER values in rat TBECs. These data confirm that rat TBECs form polarized, mucus-producing, ciliated monolayers, in our hands providing an excellent in vitro model of the respiratory epithelium.
Rat TBECs express functional dual oxidases
In humans, dual oxidases are expressed in TBECs in vivo [5] or in vitro in ALI cultures [16, 17, 34, 39]. Duox proteins were also detected in in vitro cultures of rat and cow TBECs, although detailed description of their culture conditions was not provided [34]. Here, we provide detailed characterization of Duox expression and function in rat TBECs. As shown in Fig. 2a, polarized rat TBECs express Duox protein (~180 kDa molecular weight) to similar extent in all three animals studied. Although the antibody favors detection of Duox1, it is not isoform specific [40]. Therefore, we detected gene expression levels of each isoform, Duox1 and Duox2, by reverse transcriptase PCR. Figure 2b shows that both isoforms are expressed at a comparable level in rat TBECs. Reverse transcriptase was omitted in control samples to show specificity for amplification of Duox1 and Duox2 and lack of contaminating genomic DNA (Fig. 2b). To show that rat TBECs contain functional Duox enzymes, we measured extracellular H2O2 release by horse radish peroxidase (HRP)-mediated oxidation of homovanillic acid (HVA)—as previously described [16, 18]. Rat TBECs spontaneously produced extracellular H2O2 (referred to as “basal production”) that could be still enhanced by known activators of Duox: ATP and ionomycin (Fig. 2c) [17, 30, 41]. In the current study, we used ATP to stimulate Duox activity (Figs. 4a, 5), but also show data without ATP stimulation (Fig. 4b). Duox requires an increase in cytosolic calcium to be activated [39, 42]. Scavenging extracellular calcium by EGTA largely reduces basal H2O2 output of rat TBECs, suggesting that Duox enzymes are their main H2O2 producers and that extracellular calcium is required for their activation (Fig. 2d). Absolute quantitation of H2O2 production revealed that rat TBECs produce 5.2 ± 1.0 nmol H2O2/h/106 cells spontaneously, that is enhanced by 89.5 % to 9.5 ± 2.2 nmol H2O2/hr/106 cells when stimulated with the calcium ionophore ionomycin (1 μM, mean ± SEM, n = 3, Fig. 2e). H2O2 production of rat TBECs is similar to that of human NHBE cells as shown by our previous data [17]. In summary, rat TBECs express both Duox isoforms that are the main H2O2 sources.
Rat TBECs inactivate H1N2 influenza A virus in a H2O2/LPO/SCN−-dependent manner
Although enzyme-free OSCN− has virucidal effect against the pandemic A/H1N1/2009 influenza virus [24] and NHBE cells upregulate Duox in response to H1N1 and H3N2 IAV strains [25], there are no data to show direct IAV inactivation by the Duox/H2O2/LPO/SCN− system and response of TBECs to the H1N2 subtype. To address this knowledge gap, we exposed TBEC cultures to the H1N2 IAV strain A/Swine/Illinois/02860/09 (swH1N2) at a multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 0.1 for 1 h (see explanatory scheme in Fig. 3). swH1N2 is an endemic swine strain originally isolated in the state of Illinois in 2009 [26, 43]. Supernatants were collected from infected TBEC cultures to prepare tenfold serial dilutions (Fig. 3). Diluted viral suspensions were added to Madin-Darby canine kidney epithelial cells (MDCK) (Fig. 3). Plaques were counted after 3 days of incubation, and changes in viable virion concentrations were calculated (Fig. 3). Although Duox enzymes show high spontaneous activity in rat TBECs, ATP was added to enhance their H2O2 output (Fig. 2). LPO and SCN− were added as indicated at levels found in human airways (SCN−: 400 μM, LPO 6.5 μg/mL) (Fig. 4) [34, 39]. Figure 4 shows that a remarkable, significant 2–3 log reduction in the number of viable H1N2 IAV virions occurred when the complete H2O2/LPO/SCN− system was reconstituted on top of rat TBEC cultures. Omitting LPO, SCN− or both resulted in complete loss of virion inactivation (Fig. 4a), indicating that the full system needs to be present and OSCN− is responsible for viral inactivation. Data presented in Fig. 4b also show that addition of ATP is not required for H1N2 inactivation, indicating that basal H2O2 production is sufficient to fuel the antiviral activity of LPO and OSCN−. Addition of a high dose of catalase (CAT) to the full system blocked entirely IAV inactivation, proving that H2O2 production by rat TBECs is essential (Fig. 4b). Although the affinity of LPO is higher for H2O2 than that of catalase, we used catalase at an about 1000 times higher molar concentration than LPO to ensure that catalase scavenged all H2O2 prior to reaction with LPO (Figs. 4b, 5). Twenty times lower levels of catalase have been shown to be sufficient to block the antimicrobial effect of the H2O2/LPO/SCN system [34].
H1N2 IAV inactivation by the H2O2/LPO/SCN− system of NHBE cells
To determine whether primary cultures of human bronchial epithelial cells behave similarly to rat TBECs, we exposed human NHBE cells to H1N2 IAV under the same conditions as the rat cells (Fig. 4) and followed influenza virion inactivation as described. Similar to the results shown in Fig. 4, NHBE cells caused H1N2 inactivation when the full H2O2/LPO/SCN− system was assembled (Fig. 5). If LPO, SCN− or both were left out, influenza inactivation was entirely inhibited (Fig. 5). This highlights the crucial antiviral role of the final product, OSCN− against influenza, and proves that NHBE cells can produce sufficient H2O2 by Duox to fuel this antiviral system. In addition, we also show that the H2O2 scavenger catalase entirely blocks the virion-inactivating effect of the H2O2/LPO/SCN− system (Fig. 5, see “CAT”)—similarly to rat TBECs (Fig. 4b). This further suggests that Duox-derived H2O2 is required and is sufficient for influenza inactivation.
Overall, the Duox/H2O2/LPO/SCN− system of both rat and human cultures of primary airway epithelial cells has strong antiviral activity against the IAV H1N2 strain. Rat TBECs provide an excellent model to study IAV–Duox interactions in the respiratory epithelium.
Discussion
TBECs are the earliest responders to influenza challenge in the airways [1, 44]. Their reaction to the first invading virions is essential in determining the later fate of the inflammatory response. One of the mechanisms by which TBECs fight pathogens is the production of reactive oxygen species [1, 5, 25]. TBECs release hydrogen peroxide into the airway surface liquid that is used by LPO to oxidize its most abundant substrate, SCN−, to produce antimicrobial OSCN− [6, 7, 13, 45]. LPO is produced primarily in serous acini of submucosal glands in the airways, but also in goblet cells of the airway epithelium [5, 12, 45]. Rat airways also contain large amounts of LPO [46]. Its main substrate, SCN−, is present extracellularly in submillimolar concentrations in human airways [13]. SCN− is transported from the blood through the epithelium via several suggested transport proteins [47–49]. Both LPO and SCN− are abundantly present in airway secretion, and H2O2 production represents the rate-limiting factor in the activity of the system. In intact airways, H2O2 is primarily provided by two NADPH oxidases, Duox1 and Duox2 [5]. Both Duox enzymes and their maturation factors (Duox activators) localize to the apical plasma membrane of bronchial epithelial cells ideally suited to produce extracellular H2O2 [5, 18]. In vitro ALI cultures of differentiated and polarized human respiratory epithelium express high amounts of Duox, produce apical H2O2 and kill several microorganisms in a H2O2-dependent manner [13, 17, 25, 34]. However, working with cultures of primary human cells has significant limitations: 4–5 weeks of culturing time, high cost and, most importantly, large donor-to-donor variation. We used ALI cultures of rat TBECs to complement our data obtained with human cells. Obtaining primary rat cells is cost-effective, the cells are faster to culture, show little variation among donors and allow larger-scale studies. Our rat TBECs reconstitute all the characteristic features of human cultures and express both dual oxidases (Figs. 1, 2). This is in accordance with previous studies that also used rat TBEC ALI cultures [34, 50–52]. Our data showing that rat TBECs inactivate IAV similarly to human cultures indicate that rat TBECs provide an excellent, alternative model to study influenza–human airway epithelial cell interactions (Figs. 4, 5).
TBECs are capable of producing sufficient H2O2 to supply the anti-influenza effect of LPO (Figs. 4, 5). All three components (Duox/H2O2, LPO and SCN−) are necessary to inactivate IAV. Omitting one, two or all three components results in no significant inactivation of IAV. Thus, not only enzyme-free [24] but also enzyme-derived OSCN− efficiently inactivates IAV. Detailed responses of human epithelial cells to H1N1 and H3N2 subtypes of IAV have been shown, but their direct extracellular inactivation by the Duox-based system has not been documented [25]. Our studies are the first to show that extracellular influenza viruses can be inactivated efficiently by epithelial-derived OSCN− prior to viral entry. This adds influenza to the growing list of pathogens that the H2O2/LPO/SCN− system is capable of inactivating/killing [13, 17, 20, 34]. We also show that Duox and LPO are efficient against the H1N2 subtype of IAV.
There are two isoforms of Duox, both of which are highly expressed in TBECs [2, 5, 17, 25, 53]. Which isoform is more important to produce H2O2 in TBECs is unclear at this point. It is well accepted that in human TBECs, Duox1 is the main Duox isoform expressed [5, 16]. Basal Duox2 expression is lower, but Duox2 can be induced to a larger extent by microbial stimuli [54]. While the in vivo role of Duox1 is still unknown, the main physiological function of Duox2 is clearly to provide H2O2 for thyroid hormone biosynthesis [55]. This is evident since both Duox2-deficient mice and human patients with Duox2 mutations develop hypothyroidism [56, 57]. Our data indicate that rat TBECs express both Duox1 and Duox2 at similar levels. Although Duox2 has been proposed to be the main isoform in rat TBECs [34], this conclusion was drawn from an siRNA transfection experiment which showed minimal effect on apical H2O2 output without showing isoform specificity of the siRNAs. The situation is likely more complicated, and both isoforms could be activated by different stimuli or could overtake each other’s function to provide redundancy. Therefore, further data are needed to clearly identify the main Duox isoform responsible for the antimicrobial effect of TBECs.
It is important to emphasize the very fast action of the Duox/H2O2/LPO/SCN− system to inactivate IAV. Under our experimental conditions, IAV was only added for 1 h on top of TBECs. During this time, there is a significant decrease in the concentration of viable extracellular virions if the whole antiviral system is assembled (Figs. 4, 5). We assume that this rapid and robust inactivation of IAV by the Duox-based system largely reduces their potential to infect TBECs and to cause inflammation. To our current knowledge, very few, if any, airway immune responses act so quickly [1, 58]. Antimicrobial peptides are already present in the airway surface liquid, but we estimate that the OSCN−-generating mechanism has a larger virucidal capacity and is more manipulative (it can be turned on or off fast) [59, 60]. These features make the Duox/H2O2/LPO/SCN− antiviral system ideal for pharmaceutical intervention. By enhancing its anti-influenza effect, we could eliminate extracellular virions still present on the airway surface before establishing infections in TBECs and triggering inflammation. All the downstream effects of IAV infection could be theoretically prevented at the earliest intervention time point possible.
Abbreviations
- ALI:
-
Air–liquid interface
- Duox:
-
Dual oxidase
- HA:
-
Hemagglutinin
- LPO:
-
Lactoperoxidase
- MDCK:
-
Madin-Darby canine kidney cells
- MOI:
-
Multiplicity of infection
- NA:
-
Neuraminidase
- NHBE:
-
Normal human bronchial epithelium
- OSCN− :
-
Hypothiocyanite
- SCN− :
-
Thiocyanate
- TBEC:
-
Tracheobronchial epithelial cell
- TEER:
-
Transepithelial electrical resistance
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Acknowledgments
This work was supported by the (1) start-up fund of Dr. Rada provided by the Office of Vice President for Research at UGA and (2) the funds of Dr. Tripp provided by the Georgia Research Alliance. We thank Dr. Thomas Leto (NIAID, NIH) for the critical reading of the manuscript.
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Responsible Editor: John Di Battista.
Ralph A. Tripp and Balázs Rada have contributed equally to this work.
Ralph A. Tripp and Balázs Rada are joint senior authors
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Gingerich, A., Pang, L., Hanson, J. et al. Hypothiocyanite produced by human and rat respiratory epithelial cells inactivates extracellular H1N2 influenza A virus. Inflamm. Res. 65, 71–80 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00011-015-0892-z
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00011-015-0892-z