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Angiotensin receptor blockade attenuates cigarette smoke–induced lung injury and rescues lung architecture in mice
Megan Podowski, … , Robert Wise, Enid Neptune
Megan Podowski, … , Robert Wise, Enid Neptune
Published December 19, 2011
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2012;122(1):229-240. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI46215.
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Research Article Development Article has an altmetric score of 18

Angiotensin receptor blockade attenuates cigarette smoke–induced lung injury and rescues lung architecture in mice

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Abstract

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a prevalent smoking-related disease for which no disease-altering therapies currently exist. As dysregulated TGF-β signaling associates with lung pathology in patients with COPD and in animal models of lung injury induced by chronic exposure to cigarette smoke (CS), we postulated that inhibiting TGF-β signaling would protect against CS-induced lung injury. We first confirmed that TGF-β signaling was induced in the lungs of mice chronically exposed to CS as well as in COPD patient samples. Importantly, key pathological features of smoking-associated lung disease in patients, e.g., alveolar injury with overt emphysema and airway epithelial hyperplasia with fibrosis, accompanied CS-induced alveolar cell apoptosis caused by enhanced TGF-β signaling in CS-exposed mice. Systemic administration of a TGF-β–specific neutralizing antibody normalized TGF-β signaling and alveolar cell death, conferring improved lung architecture and lung mechanics in CS-exposed mice. Use of losartan, an angiotensin receptor type 1 blocker used widely in the clinic and known to antagonize TGF-β signaling, also improved oxidative stress, inflammation, metalloprotease activation and elastin remodeling. These data support our hypothesis that inhibition of TGF-β signaling through angiotensin receptor blockade can attenuate CS-induced lung injury in an established murine model. More importantly, our findings provide a preclinical platform for the development of other TGF-β–targeted therapies for patients with COPD.

Authors

Megan Podowski, Carla Calvi, Shana Metzger, Kaori Misono, Hataya Poonyagariyagorn, Armando Lopez-Mercado, Therese Ku, Thomas Lauer, Sharon McGrath-Morrow, Alan Berger, Christopher Cheadle, Rubin Tuder, Harry C. Dietz, Wayne Mitzner, Robert Wise, Enid Neptune

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Figure 5

Effect of losartan on CS-induced injury measures.

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Effect of losartan on CS-induced injury measures.
(A) Nitrotyrosine (NiT...
(A) Nitrotyrosine (NiTyr) staining (brown) of lung parenchyma (right) and airways (left) of lungs exposed to CS or CS plus losartan. Original magnification, ×40. Scale bar: 50 μm. n = 4–6 mice per group. (B) Quantitative immunohistochemistry of nitrotyrosine-stained lungs. Staining was normalized to tissue area. n = 4–6 mice per group. (C) Quantitative immunohistochemistry of macrophage abundance in lungs using MAC3 staining. Staining was normalized to tissue area. n = 4–6 mice per group. (D) Quantitative immunohistochemistry of lymphocyte abundance in lungs using CD45R staining. Staining was normalized to tissue area. n = 4–6 mice per group. (E) Representative photomicrographs of TUNEL-stained lungs. Arrowheads denote staining in airspace epithelial cells in CS-exposed lungs. Original magnification, ×20 (top row); ×40 (bottom row). Scale bar: 50 μm. n = 4–6 mice per condition or per treatment. Quantitative immunohistochemistry of TUNEL staining reflecting the apoptotic index. Data are represented as mean ± SEM. (F) Representative photomicrographs of active caspase-3–stained (C3-stained) lungs. The black arrowhead denotes positive staining in type II alveolar epithelial type II cell. The white arrowhead denotes negative staining in nearby type II epithelial cell. The black arrow shows lack of staining in type I alveolar epithelial cell. Original magnification, ×40. Scale bar: 50 μm. n = 4–6 mice per condition or per treatment. Quantitative immunohistochemistry of active caspase-3 staining normalized to tissue area. Data are represented as mean ± SEM. *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01.

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ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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