Cigarette smoke induces overexpression of active human cathepsin S in lungs from current smokers with or without COPD

Author:

Andrault Pierre-Marie12,Schamberger Andrea C.3,Chazeirat Thibault12,Sizaret Damien14,Renault Justine1,Staab-Weijnitz Claudia A.3ORCID,Hennen Elisabeth3,Petit-Courty Agnès12,Wartenberg Mylène12,Saidi Ahlame12,Baranek Thomas12,Guyetant Serge14,Courty Yves12ORCID,Eickelberg Oliver3ORCID,Lalmanach Gilles12,Lecaille Fabien12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Université de Tours, Tours, France

2. INSERM, UMR 1100, Centre d’Etude des Pathologies Respiratoires, Team Mécanismes Protéolytiques dans l’Inflammation, Tours, France

3. Comprehensive Pneumology Center, Institute of Lung Biology and Disease, University Hospital, Ludwig-Maximilians-University and Helmholtz Zentrum München, Member of the German Center for Lung Research, Munich, Germany

4. Centre Hospitalier Régional Universitaire de Tours, Service d’Anatomie et Cytologie Pathologique, Tours, France

Abstract

Cigarette smoking has marked effects on lung tissue, including induction of oxidative stress, inflammatory cell recruitment, and a protease/antiprotease imbalance. These effects contribute to tissue remodeling and destruction resulting in loss of lung function in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients. Cathepsin S (CatS) is a cysteine protease that is involved in the remodeling/degradation of connective tissue and basement membrane. Aberrant expression or activity of CatS has been implicated in a variety of diseases, including arthritis, cancer, cardiovascular, and lung diseases. However, little is known about the effect of cigarette smoking on both CatS expression and activity, as well as its role in smoking-related lung diseases. Here, we evaluated the expression and activity of human CatS in lung tissues from never-smokers and smokers with or without COPD. Despite the presence of an oxidizing environment, CatS expression and activity were significantly higher in current smokers (both non-COPD and COPD) compared with never-smokers, and correlated positively with smoking history. Moreover, we found that the exposure of primary human bronchial epithelial cells to cigarette smoke extract triggered the activation of P2X7 receptors, which in turns drives CatS upregulation. The present data suggest that excessive CatS expression and activity contribute, beside other proteases, to the deleterious effects of cigarette smoke on pulmonary homeostasis.

Funder

Région Centre-Val de Loire

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Cell Biology,Physiology (medical),Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine,Physiology

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