TY - JOUR
T1 - Involvement of capsaicin-sensitive lung vagal neurons and trpa1 receptors in airway hypersensitivity induced by 1,3-β-d-glucan in anesthetized rats
AU - Lin, You Shuei
AU - Huang, I. Hsuan
AU - Lan, Sheng Hsuan
AU - Chen, Chia Ling
AU - Chen, Yueh Yin
AU - Chan, Nai Ju
AU - Hsu, Chun Chun
N1 - Funding Information:
Funding: This research was funded in part by Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST108-2320-B-038-059-MY3 and MOST104-2320-B-038-029) and Ministry of Education (DP2-109-21121-01-T-02-03) from Taiwan. And the APC was funded by MOST108-2320-B-038-059-MY3.
Funding Information:
This research was funded in part by Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST108-2320-B-038-059-MY3 and MOST104-2320-B-038-029) and Ministry of Education (DP2-109-21121-01-T-02-03) from Taiwan. And the APC was funded by MOST108-2320-B-038-059-MY3. Acknowledgments: The authors acknowledgment the Core Facility Center of Taipei Medical University for supporting equitments.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
PY - 2020/9/2
Y1 - 2020/9/2
N2 - Airway exposure to 1,3-β-D-glucan (β-glucan), an essential component of the cell wall of several pathogenic fungi, causes various adverse responses, such as pulmonary inflammation and airway hypersensitivity. The former response has been intensively investigated; however, the mechanism underlying β-glucan-induced airway hypersensitivity is unknown. Capsaicin-sensitive lung vagal (CSLV) afferents are very chemosensitive and stimulated by various insults to the lungs. Activation of CSLV afferents triggers several airway reflexes, such as cough. Furthermore, the sensitization of these afferents is known to contribute to the airway hypersensitivity during pulmonary inflammation. This study was carried out to determine whether β-glucan induces airway hypersensitivity and the role of the CSLV neurons in this hypersensitivity. Our results showed that the intratracheal instillation of β-glucan caused not only a distinctly irregular pattern in baseline breathing, but also induced a marked enhancement in the pulmonary chemoreflex responses to capsaicin in anesthetized, spontaneously breathing rats. The potentiating effect of β-glucan was found 45 min later and persisted at 90 min. However, β-glucan no longer caused the irregular baseline breathing and the potentiating of pulmonary chemoreflex responses after treatment with perineural capsaicin treatment that blocked the conduction of CSLV fibers. Besides, the potentiating effect of β-glucan on pulmonary chemoreflex responses was significantly attenuated by N-acetyl-L-cysteine (a ROS scavenger), HC-030031 (a TRPA1 antagonist), and Laminarin (a Dectin-1 antagonist). A combination of Laminarin and HC-030031 further reduced the β-glucan-induced effect. Indeed, our fiber activity results showed that the baseline fiber activity and the sensitivity of CSLV afferents were markedly elevated by β-glucan instillation, with a similar timeframe in anesthetized, artificially ventilated rats. Moreover, this effect was reduced by treatment with HC-030031. In isolated rat CSLV neurons, the β-glucan perfusion caused a similar pattern of potentiating effects on capsaicin-induced Ca2+ transients, and β-glucan-induced sensitization was abolished by Laminarin pretreatment. Furthermore, the immunofluorescence results showed that there was a co-localization of TRPV1 and Dectin-1 expression in the DiI-labeled lung vagal neurons. These results suggest that CSLV afferents play a vital role in the airway hypersensitivity elicited by airway exposure to β-glucan. The TRPA1 and Dectin-1 receptors appear to be primarily responsible for generating β-glucan-induced airway hypersensitivity.
AB - Airway exposure to 1,3-β-D-glucan (β-glucan), an essential component of the cell wall of several pathogenic fungi, causes various adverse responses, such as pulmonary inflammation and airway hypersensitivity. The former response has been intensively investigated; however, the mechanism underlying β-glucan-induced airway hypersensitivity is unknown. Capsaicin-sensitive lung vagal (CSLV) afferents are very chemosensitive and stimulated by various insults to the lungs. Activation of CSLV afferents triggers several airway reflexes, such as cough. Furthermore, the sensitization of these afferents is known to contribute to the airway hypersensitivity during pulmonary inflammation. This study was carried out to determine whether β-glucan induces airway hypersensitivity and the role of the CSLV neurons in this hypersensitivity. Our results showed that the intratracheal instillation of β-glucan caused not only a distinctly irregular pattern in baseline breathing, but also induced a marked enhancement in the pulmonary chemoreflex responses to capsaicin in anesthetized, spontaneously breathing rats. The potentiating effect of β-glucan was found 45 min later and persisted at 90 min. However, β-glucan no longer caused the irregular baseline breathing and the potentiating of pulmonary chemoreflex responses after treatment with perineural capsaicin treatment that blocked the conduction of CSLV fibers. Besides, the potentiating effect of β-glucan on pulmonary chemoreflex responses was significantly attenuated by N-acetyl-L-cysteine (a ROS scavenger), HC-030031 (a TRPA1 antagonist), and Laminarin (a Dectin-1 antagonist). A combination of Laminarin and HC-030031 further reduced the β-glucan-induced effect. Indeed, our fiber activity results showed that the baseline fiber activity and the sensitivity of CSLV afferents were markedly elevated by β-glucan instillation, with a similar timeframe in anesthetized, artificially ventilated rats. Moreover, this effect was reduced by treatment with HC-030031. In isolated rat CSLV neurons, the β-glucan perfusion caused a similar pattern of potentiating effects on capsaicin-induced Ca2+ transients, and β-glucan-induced sensitization was abolished by Laminarin pretreatment. Furthermore, the immunofluorescence results showed that there was a co-localization of TRPV1 and Dectin-1 expression in the DiI-labeled lung vagal neurons. These results suggest that CSLV afferents play a vital role in the airway hypersensitivity elicited by airway exposure to β-glucan. The TRPA1 and Dectin-1 receptors appear to be primarily responsible for generating β-glucan-induced airway hypersensitivity.
KW - Afferent sensitization
KW - Airway hypersensitivity
KW - Capsaicin-sensitive lung vagal afferents
KW - Dectin-1
KW - Fungi
KW - Glucan
KW - Sensory neuron
KW - TRPA1
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85091078627&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85091078627&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3390/ijms21186845
DO - 10.3390/ijms21186845
M3 - Article
C2 - 32961891
AN - SCOPUS:85091078627
SN - 1661-6596
VL - 21
SP - 1
EP - 20
JO - International journal of molecular sciences
JF - International journal of molecular sciences
IS - 18
M1 - 6845
ER -