4.6 Article

Genome-Wide Analysis Reveals Mucociliary Remodeling of the Nasal Airway Epithelium Induced by Urban PM2.5

Journal

Publisher

AMER THORACIC SOC
DOI: 10.1165/rcmb.2019-0454OC

Keywords

air pollution particulate matter 2.5; whole transcriptome RNA-seq; human nasal airway epithelium; mucus metaplasia; airway remodeling

Funding

  1. U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01MD010443, R01HL128439, R01HL135156, P01HL132821]
  2. Department of Defense [W81WH-16-2-0018]
  3. Sandler Family Foundation
  4. American Asthma Foundation
  5. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Amos Medical Faculty Development Program
  6. NIH [R01HL128439, R01HL135156, R01HL117004, 1X01HL134589, R01HL141992, R01HL141845]
  7. Environmental Health Sciences [R01ES015794, R21ES24844]
  8. National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities [R01MD010443, P60MD006902, RL5GM118984, R56MD013312]
  9. Tobacco-Related Disease Research Program [24RT-0025, 27IR-0030]
  10. National Human Genome Research Institute [U01HG009080]

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Air pollution particulate matter <2.5 mu m (PM2.5) exposure is associated with poor respiratory outcomes. Mechanisms underlying PM2.5-induced lung pathobiology are poorly understood but likely involve cellular and molecular changes to the airway epithelium. We extracted and chemically characterized the organic and water-soluble components of air pollution PM2.5 samples, then determined the whole transcriptome response of human nasal mucociliary airway epithelial cultures to a dose series of PM2.5 extracts. We found that PM2.5 organic extract (OE), but not water-soluble extract, elicited a potent, dose-dependent transcriptomic response from the mucociliary epithelium. Exposure to a moderate OE dose modified the expression of 424 genes, including activation of aryl hydrocarbon receptor signaling and an IL-1 inflammatory program. We generated an OE-response gene network defined by eight functional enrichment groups, which exhibited high connectivity through CYP1A1, IL1A, and IL1B. This OE exposure also robustly activated a mucus secretory expression program (>100 genes), which included transcriptional drivers of mucus metaplasia (SPDEF and FOXA3). Exposure to a higher OE dose modified the expression of 1,240 genes and further exacerbated expression responses observed at the moderate dose, including the mucus secretory program. Moreover, the higher OE dose significantly increased the MUC5AC/MUC5B gel-forming mucin expression ratio and strongly downregulated ciliated cell expression programs, including key ciliating cell transcription factors (e.g., FOXJ1 and MCIDAS). Chronic OE stimulation induced mucus metaplasia-like remodeling characterized by increases in MUC5AC(+) secretory cells and MUC5AC mucus secretions. This epithelial remodeling may underlie poor respiratory outcomes associated with high PM2.5 exposure.

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