Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0034067 (emphysema)
11,506 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is mainly caused by cigarette smoking, and is characterized by an increase in inflammatory cells in the airways and pulmonary tissue. The chemokine receptor CCR6 and its ligand MIP-3alpha/CCL20 may be involved in the recruitment of these inflammatory cells. To investigate the role of CCR6 in the pathogenesis of COPD, we analyzed the inflammatory responses of CCR6 knockout (KO) and wild-type mice upon cigarette smoke (CS) exposure. Both subacute and chronic exposure to CS induced an increase in cells of the innate and adaptive immune system in the bronchoalveolar lavage, both in CCR6 KO and wild-type mice. However, the accumulation of dendritic cells, neutrophils, and T lymphocytes, which express CCR6, was significantly attenuated in the CCR6 KO mice, compared with their wild-type littermates. In the lung tissue of CCR6 KO mice, there was an impaired increase in dendritic cells, activated CD8(+) T lymphocytes, and granulocytes. Moreover, this attenuated inflammatory response in CCR6 KO mice offered a partial protection against pulmonary emphysema, which correlated with an impaired production of MMP-12. Importantly, protein levels of MIP-3alpha/CCL20, the only chemokine ligand of the CCR6 receptor, and MCP-1/CCL2 were significantly increased upon CS exposure in wild-type, but not in CCR6 KO mice. In contrast, CCR6 deficiency had no effect on the development of airway wall remodeling upon chronic CS exposure. These results indicate that the interaction of CCR6 with its ligand MIP-3alpha contributes to the pathogenesis of CS-induced pulmonary inflammation and emphysema in this murine model of COPD.
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PMID:Cigarette smoke-induced pulmonary inflammation and emphysema are attenuated in CCR6-deficient mice. 1698 69

Exposure to tobacco smoke activates innate and adaptive immune responses that in long-term smokers have been linked to diseases of the lungs, cardiovascular system, joints, and other organs. The destruction of lung tissue that underlies smoking-induced emphysema has been associated with T helper 1 cells that recognize the matrix protein elastin. Factors that result in the development of such autoreactive T cells in smokers remain unknown but are crucial for further understanding the pathogenesis of systemic inflammatory diseases in smokers. Here, we show that lung myeloid dendritic cells were sufficient to induce T helper 1 and T helper 17 responses in CD4 T cells. T helper 1 and 17 cells are invariably present in lungs from patients with emphysema but not in lungs from normal individuals. Interleukin-17A, a canonical T helper 17 cytokine, enhanced secretion of CCL20, a chemoattractant for dendritic cells, and matrix metalloproteinase 12, a potent elastolytic proteinase, from lung macrophages. Thus, although diverse lung factors potentially contribute to T helper effector differentiation in vivo, lung myeloid dendritic cells direct the generation of pathogenic T cells and support a feedback mechanism that sustains both inflammatory cell recruitment and lung destruction. This mechanism may underlie disease in other elastin-rich organs and tissues.
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PMID:Lung myeloid dendritic cells coordinately induce TH1 and TH17 responses in human emphysema. 2036 70