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Lysophosphatidic Acid Induces Interleukin-13 (IL-13) Receptor Alpha2 Expression and Inhibits IL-13 Signaling in Primary Human Bronchial Epithelial Cells

Overview
Journal J Biol Chem
Specialty Biochemistry
Date 2007 Feb 9
PMID 17287216
Citations 27
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Abstract

Interleukin-13 (IL-13), a Th2 cytokine, plays a pivotal role in pathogenesis of bronchial asthma via IL-13 receptor alpha1 (IL-13Ralpha1) and IL-4 receptor alpha (IL-4Ralpha). Recent studies show that a decoy receptor for IL-13, namely IL-13Ralpha2, mitigates IL-13 signaling and function. This study provides evidence for regulation of IL-13Ralpha2 production and release and IL-13-dependent signaling by lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) in primary cultures of human bronchial epithelial cells (HBEpCs). LPA treatment of HBEpCs in at imedependent fashion increased IL-13Ralpha2 gene expression without altering the mRNA levels of IL-13Ralpha1 and IL-4Ralpha. Pretreatment with pertussis toxin (100 ng/ml, 4 h) or transfection of c-Jun small interference RNA or an inhibitor of JNK attenuated LPA-induced IL-13Ralpha2 gene expression and secretion of soluble IL-13Ralpha2. Overexpression of catalytically inactive mutants of phospholipase D (PLD) 1 or 2 attenuated LPA-induced IL-13Ralpha2 gene expression and protein secretion as well as phosphorylation of JNK. Pretreatment of HBEpCs with 1 microM LPA for 6 h attenuated IL-13-but not IL-4-induced phosphorylation of STAT6. Transfection of HBEpCs with IL-13Ralpha2 small interference RNA blocked the effect of LPA on IL-13-induced phosphorylation of STAT6. Furthermore, pretreatment with LPA (1 microM, 6 h) attenuated IL-13-induced eotaxin-1 and SOCS-1 gene expression. These results demonstrate that LPA induces IL-13Ralpha2 expression and release via PLD and JNK/AP-1 signal transduction and that pretreatment with LPA down-regulates IL-13 signaling in HBEpCs. Our data suggest a novel mechanism of regulation of IL-13Ralpha2 and IL-13 signaling that may be of physiological relevance to airway inflammation and remodeling.

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