4.6 Article

Dietary Fatty Acids Amplify Inflammatory Responses to Infection through p38 MAPK Signaling

Journal

Publisher

AMER THORACIC SOC
DOI: 10.1165/rcmb.2018-0215OC

Keywords

viral infection; asthma exacerbations; dietary fatty acids; primary lung fibroblasts; obese asthma

Funding

  1. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia [APP1110368]
  2. Faculty of Health and Medicine (University of Newcastle)
  3. Rainbow Foundation

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Obesity is an important risk factor for severe asthma exacerbations, which are mainly caused by respiratory infections. Dietary fatty acids, which are increased systemically in obese patients and are further increased after high-fat meals, affect the innate immune system and may contribute to dysfunctional immune responses to respiratory infection. In this study we investigated the effects of dietary fatty acids on immune responses to respiratory infection in pulmonary fibroblasts and a bronchial epithelial cell line (BEAS-2B). Cells were challenged with BSA-conjugated fatty acids (omega-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids [PUFAs], omega-3 PUFAs, or saturated fatty acids [SFAs]) +/- the viral mimic polyinosinicpolycytidylic acid (poly[I:C]) or bacterial compound lipoteichoic acid (LTA), and release of proinflammatory cytokines was measured. In both cell types, challenge with arachidonic acid (AA) (omega-6 PUFA) and poly(I:C) or LTA led to substantially greater IL-6 and CXCL8 release than either challenge alone, demonstrating synergy. In epithelial cells, palmitic acid (SFA) combined with poly(LC) also led to greater IL-6 release. The underlying signaling pathways of AA and poly(I:C)- or LTA-induced cytokine release were examined using specific signaling inhibitors and IB. Cytokine production in pulmonary fibroblasts was prostaglandin dependent, and synergistic upregulation occurred via p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase signaling, whereas cytokine production in bronchial epithelial cell lines was mainly mediated through JNK and p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase signaling. We confirmed these findings using rhinovirus infection, demonstrating that AA enhances rhinovirus-induced cytokine release. This study suggests that during respiratory infection, increased levels of dietary omega-6 PUFAs and SFAs may lead to more severe airway inflammation and may contribute to and/or increase the severity of asthma exacerbations.

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