Stress-fighting proteins could lead to asthma treatments
This image illustrates XBP1-deficient bone marrow-derived eosinophils without amyloid structures. The nucleus is colored in blue, and specific eosinophil proteins are stained red. |
Weill Cornell Medical College investigators have
discovered the precise molecular steps that enable immune cells
implicated in certain forms of asthma and allergy to develop and survive
in the body. The findings reveal a new pathway that scientists could
use to develop more effective treatments and therapies for the chronic
lung disorder.
More than 1 in 12 Americans are affected
by asthma, a disorder characterized by an overactive immune response to
normally harmless substances such as pollen or mold. Scientists
previously had found that an overabundance of immune cells called
eosinophils, which help defend the body against parasites and infection,
are implicated in certain forms of asthma as well as in allergic
reactions. But little was known about how eosinophils develop and
survive.
In their study, published July 6 in Nature
Immunology, the researchers discovered that a signaling pathway, formed
by two proteins that help cells survive stressful conditions, also plays
a critical role in eosinophil development. When the researchers altered
the function of either of those proteins, the eosinophils, but not
other cell types, underwent excess stress and were completely wiped out.
This suggests that the pathway could serve as a new therapeutic target
for patients who respond poorly to current asthma therapies.
“Our
findings demonstrate that individual cell types, particularly
eosinophils, interpret and manage stress in distinct ways,” said lead
author Dr. Sarah E. Bettigole, a postdoctoral fellow at Weill Cornell.
“If we disrupt the ability to respond to stress, sensitive cells like
eosinophils die off. These subtle differences could be leveraged to
develop novel therapies for diseases like asthma and eosinophilic
leukemia.”
Eosinophils belong to a group of cells
called granulocytes, which develop in the bone marrow before migrating
into blood. During early stages of development, these cells produce
proteins that are critical for survival, as well as toxic proteins that
are later released in response to an immune trigger, such as bacteria or
viruses. Intense bursts of protein production during normal biological
processes put strain on a cell structure called the endoplasmic
reticulum (ER), which plays a crucial role in protein synthesis and
transport. If the ER is overwhelmed by such strain, the cell enters a
state known as ER stress.
In response to ER stress, a
protein called IRE1alpha helps to generate a highly active form of a
second protein called XBP1, which in turn regulates the activity of
various genes involved in the cell stress response. This signaling
pathway reduces ER stress and prevents cell death by enhancing the ER's
protein synthesis capacity while reducing overall protein production.
“Because
XBP1 supports the survival of certain mature cell types that make a lot
of protein throughout their lives, we suspected that XBP1 might also
help cells like eosinophils cope with intense bursts of protein
production during development,” said senior author Dr. Laurie H.
Glimcher, the Stephen and Suzanne Weiss Dean of Weill Cornell Medical
College.
In support of this idea, the research team
found that the IRE1alpha/XBP1 pathway became increasingly active in
differentiating eosinophils as they produced more and more proteins
during progressive developmental stages. Moreover, genetically modified
mice that were deficient in XBP1 completely lacked eosinophils in the
bone marrow, spleen and blood, while other granulocytes were unaffected.
“So
far, XBP1 is the only transcription factor to our knowledge that
distinguishes the development of eosinophils from that of other
granulocytes,” Glimcher said. “This suggests that subtle differences in
cellular biological processes provide a previously unappreciated handle
for fine-tuning the production of different types of granulocytes.”
The
loss of XBP1 in eosinophils also altered the activity of genes that are
critical for the ER stress response, leading to the accumulation of
incorrectly processed proteins, substantial ER swelling and severe
granule dysfunction. Without XBP1, the researchers discovered that
developing eosinophils underwent too much stress. This stalled their
differentiation by blocking a molecule called GATA1, which ensures that
young eosinophils finish maturing into adult eosinophils. The
researchers found that too much stress and not enough GATA1 eventually
killed the eosinophils.
Taken together, the findings
suggest that ER health is crucial for eosinophil development and
survival, highlighting the IRE1alpha/XBP1 pathway as a potential
therapeutic target in a wide variety of eosinophil-mediated diseases.
The
researchers are testing whether experimental XBP1 or IRE1alpha
inhibitors can be effective treatments for asthma and eosinophil
leukemia.
“We now know that XBP1 is required for normal
eosinophil development, but we need to figure out whether
eosinophil-mediated respiratory illnesses and cancers are also dependent
on this pathway,” Bettigole said. “If these diseases are
eosinophil-dependent, blocking IRE1alpha or XBP1 with pharmaceuticals
would be an exciting new treatment strategy.”
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