Local small airway epithelial injury induces global smooth muscle contraction and airway constriction

Author:

Zhou Jian1,Alvarez-Elizondo Martha B.12,Botvinick Elliot1234,George Steven C.154

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Engineering,

2. Beckman Laser Institute and Medical Clinic,

3. Surgery,

4. Edwards Lifesciences Center for Advanced Cardiovascular Technology, University of California, Irvine, California

5. Departments of 3Chemical Engineering and Materials and

Abstract

Small airway epithelial cells form a continuous sheet lining the conducting airways, which serves many functions including a physical barrier to protect the underlying tissue. In asthma, injury to epithelial cells can occur during bronchoconstriction, which may exacerbate airway hyperreactivity. To investigate the role of epithelial cell rupture in airway constriction, laser ablation was used to precisely rupture individual airway epithelial cells of small airways (<300-μm diameter) in rat lung slices (∼250-μm thick). Laser ablation of single epithelial cells using a femtosecond laser reproducibly induced airway contraction to ∼70% of the original cross-sectional area within several seconds, and the contraction lasted for up to 40 s. The airway constriction could be mimicked by mechanical rupture of a single epithelial cell using a sharp glass micropipette but not with a blunt glass pipette. These results suggest that soluble mediators released from the wounded epithelial cell induce global airway contraction. To confirm this hypothesis, the lysate of primary human small airway epithelial cells stimulated a similar airway contraction. Laser ablation of single epithelial cells triggered a single instantaneous Ca2+wave in the epithelium, and multiple Ca2+waves in smooth muscle cells, which were delayed by several seconds. Removal of extracellular Ca2+or decreasing intracellular Ca2+both blocked laser-induced airway contraction. We conclude that local epithelial cell rupture induces rapid and global airway constriction through release of soluble mediators and subsequent Ca2+-dependent smooth muscle shortening.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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