Blockade of MIF biological activity ameliorates house dust mite-induced allergic airway inflammation in humanized MIF mice.
Hazel DunbarIan J HawthorneCourteney TunsteadMichelle E ArmstrongSeamas C DonnellyKaren EnglishPublished in: FASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology (2023)
Macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF) expression is controlled by a functional promoter polymorphism, where the number of tetranucleotide repeats (CATT n ) corresponds to the level of MIF expression. To examine the role of this polymorphism in a pre-clinical model of allergic asthma, novel humanized MIF mice with increasing CATT repeats (CATT 5 and CATT 7 ) were used to generate a physiologically relevant scale of airway inflammation following house dust mite (HDM) challenge. CATT 7 mice expressing high levels of human MIF developed an aggressive asthma phenotype following HDM challenge with significantly elevated levels of immune cell infiltration, production of inflammatory mediators, goblet cell hyperplasia, subepithelial collagen deposition, and airway resistance compared to wild-type controls. Importantly the potent MIF inhibitor SCD-19 significantly mitigated the pathophysiology observed in CATT 7 mice after HDM challenge, demonstrating the fundamental role of endogenous human MIF expression in the severity of airway inflammation in vivo. Up to now, there are limited reproducible in vivo models of asthma airway remodeling. Current asthma medications are focused on reducing the acute inflammatory response but have limited effects on airway remodeling. Here, we present a reproducible pre-clinical model that capitulates asthma airway remodeling and suggests that in addition to having pro-inflammatory effects MIF may play a role in driving airway remodeling.
Keyphrases
- allergic rhinitis
- wild type
- chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
- lung function
- poor prognosis
- inflammatory response
- high fat diet induced
- endothelial cells
- gene expression
- adipose tissue
- oxidative stress
- dna methylation
- single cell
- type diabetes
- stem cells
- long non coding rna
- mesenchymal stem cells
- transcription factor
- health risk assessment
- insulin resistance
- mouse model
- cell therapy
- air pollution
- climate change
- respiratory failure
- bone marrow
- hepatitis b virus
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation