Published ahead of print on April 13, 2006, doi:10.1164/rccm.200512-1930OC
© 2006 American Thoracic Society doi: 10.1164/rccm.200512-1930OC
Relative Corticosteroid Insensitivity of Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells in Severe AsthmaExperimental Studies, Airways Disease Section, National Heart and Lung Institute, Imperial College London and Royal Brompton NHS Trust, London, United Kingdom Correspondence and requests for reprints should be addressed to Professor Kian Fan Chung, M.D., D.Sc., National Heart & Lung Institute, Imperial College London, Dovehouse Street, London SW3 6LY, UK. E-mail: f.chung{at}imperial.ac.uk
Rationale and Objectives: Patients with severe asthma have a poor therapeutic response to corticosteroid therapy, and corticosteroid responsiveness cannot be easily measured in these patients. We hypothesized that this poor response is associated with a reduced effect of corticosteroids to inhibit cytokine release from activated peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs).
Methods: Patients with severe asthma were defined by American Thoracic Society criteria. We compared the suppression of LPS-induced cytokine release (monocyte chemotactic protein-1 [MCP-1], macrophage inflammatory protein [MIP] 1
Results: There was no difference in baseline spontaneous or stimulated release of these cytokines among groups. LPS-induced release of 10 cytokines was less suppressed by dexamethasone (106 M) in patients with severe asthma compared with patients with nonsevere asthma, with statistical significance achieved for IL-1 Conclusions: Patients with severe asthma have diminished corticosteroid sensitivity of PBMCs when compared with patients with nonsevere asthma, associated with a reduction in HDAC activity that parallels the impaired corticosteroid sensitivity.
Key Words: corticosteroids histone acetyltransferase histone deacetylase severe asthma
Patients with asthma usually control their symptoms well with inhaled corticosteroids and long-acting The fact that patients with severe asthma have uncontrolled asthma despite taking high doses of inhaled corticosteroids, sometimes together with oral corticosteroids, has led to the hypothesis that patients with severe asthma are relatively resistant to the therapeutic effect of corticosteroids. Such patients are not absolutely resistant to the effects of corticosteroids because stopping corticosteroid therapy usually leads to a worsening of asthma in these patients. Rather, such patients, often labeled as having corticosteroid-dependent asthma, have a partial impaired response to corticosteroids. The cellular counterpart of steroid responsiveness has been studied, particularly in small groups of patients with asthma defined as having corticosteroid-resistant asthma, in whom there is persistence of airway obstruction and failure of the FEV1 to improve by 15% of baseline after 10 to 14 d of high-dose oral corticosteroids, typically 40 mg of prednisolone daily (3). In such patients, the induction of proliferation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) is less suppressible by corticosteroids when compared with that from patients with corticosteroid-sensitive asthma (4, 5), indicating that such an in vitro response could be used as a measure of corticosteroid responsiveness. There are few data regarding release of cytokines in vitro from PBMCs of patients with severe asthma. We have hypothesized that patients with severe asthma may be a subset of patients with asthma who have persistent symptoms and poor control despite receiving corticosteroid therapy because their asthmatic inflammatory response is relatively resistant to suppression, as reflected in the degree of corticosteroid suppression of cytokine release from PBMCs. We therefore measured the ability of dexamethasone to suppress the release of cytokines from PBMCs in patients with severe asthma compared with PBMCs from patients with nonsevere asthma. Because histone acetylation status as determined by histone deacetylase (HDAC) and histone acetyltransferase (HAT) activities is an important determinant of the inflammatory response and of corticosteroid responsiveness, we also assayed these activities in PBMCs. Part of this work has been previously presented at the 2005 American Thoracic Society meeting (6).
Patients Asthma was diagnosed by a physician and had FEV1 reversibility of 12% or greater or methacholine PC20 of less than 8 mg/ml. Current and ex-smokers with more than 5 pack-years of smoking history were excluded. Patients with severe asthma (n = 16) were defined according to guidelines developed by the Severe Asthma Research Program based on ATS criteria (1). They had one or two major criteria for corticosteroid usage and had three or more minor criteria, with 13 having five or more. Patients who did not meet the criteria for severe asthma were classified as having nonsevere asthma (n = 19) and used 1,000 µg or less of inhaled beclomethasone dipropionate equivalent per day. Healthy volunteers (n = 10; two women; 37.6 ± 2.4 yr of age; FEV1%predicted = 98 ± 5.0) with no asthma, using no medications, and who had never smoked were recruited. All participants gave informed consent to a protocol approved by the ethics committee of Royal Brompton and Harefield NHS Trust/National Heart and Lung Institute.
Isolation and Stimulation of PBMCs
Measurement of Cytokine Release
Measurement of HDAC and HAT Activities
Data Analysis
A comparison of the baseline data of patients with severe and nonsevere asthma is presented in Table 1. Patients with severe asthma had more severe airflow obstruction (p < 0.01) and bronchial hyperresponsiveness (p < 0.05).
Baseline and LPS-stimulated Cytokine Release Baseline release of GM-CSF, IFN- , IL-10, IL-1 , and TNF- was close to the limit of detection, thus reducing the validity of between-group comparisons for these cytokines (Figure 1A). Among the other five cytokines, levels did not significantly differ between patients with severe asthma and patients with nonsevere asthma. LPS-stimulated cytokine release was also similar between patients with severe asthma and patients with nonsevere asthma (Figure 1B).
Corticosteroid Suppression of Cytokine Release For each patient, cytokine release after dexamethasone preincubation, together with LPS stimulation, was expressed as a percentage of the value of cytokine release after LPS stimulation alone above baseline (Figure 2). There was a trend to less cytokine suppression by dexamethasone 106 M (Figure 2A) in PBMCs from patients with severe asthma compared with patients with nonsevere asthma for all 10 cytokines. We used a multivariate ANOVA to analyze the suppressed level of each cytokine by dexamethasone (106 M). There was significance for IL-1 (p < 0.03), IL-8 (p < 0.03), and MIP-1 (p < 0.003), and borderline significance for IL-6 (p = 0.054). There was no difference in the suppression of any of the 10 cytokines by dexamethasone at 108 M between the severe and the nonsevere asthma groups (Figure 2B).
In three subjects, unfractionated PBMCs were compared with monocytes (Figure 3), and the degree of steroid suppression of each individual cytokine correlated extremely highly between the two cell populations. Two data points for Patients A (IFN- and RANTES) and B (GM-CSF and IFN- ) and one data point for Patient C (GM-CSF) are omitted because cytokine levels for monocytes or PBMCs in these cases failed to rise with LPS stimulation.
HDAC Activity PBMCs from patients with severe asthma had less HDAC activity (4.59 ± 0.72 vs. 7.97 ± 0.68 µM/10 µg protein; p < 0.01) than PBMCs from patients with nonsevere asthma (Figure 4). The difference was significant regardless of whether the latter subjects were taking inhaled corticosteroids (4.59 ± 0.72 vs. 8.14 ± 0.91 µM/10 µg protein; p < 0.01) or not (4.59 ± 0.72 vs. 7.73 ± 1.10 µM/10 µg protein; p < 0.05; Figure 4). Among patients with nonsevere asthma, there was no difference in HDAC activity between those taking inhaled corticosteroids and those who were not (8.14 ± 0.91 vs. 7.73 ± 1.10 µM/10 µg protein; p = not significant [NS]).
HAT Activity PBMCs from patients with severe asthma had lower HAT activity (0.093 ± 0.029 vs. 0.261 ± 0.036 ng/10 µg protein; p < 0.01) than PBMCs from patients with nonsevere asthma. When patients with nonsevere asthma were stratified according to their use of inhaled corticosteroids (Figure 5), HAT activity was still lower in PBMCs from patients with severe asthma than in those from patients with steroid-naive nonsevere asthma (0.093 ± 0.029 vs. 0.338 ± 0.042 ng/10 µg protein; p < 0.01). However, there was no difference in HAT activity between patients with severe asthma and patients with nonsevere asthma who were taking inhaled corticosteroids (0.093 ± 0.029 vs. 0.158 ± 0.030 ng/10 µg protein; p = NS). Among patients with nonsevere asthma, there was significantly less HAT activity in those who were taking inhaled steroids (0.158 ± 0.030 vs. 0.338 ± 0.042 ng/10 µg protein; p < 0.01) than in those who were not.
Relationship between Steroid Suppression of Cytokine Release to HDAC Activity HDAC activity correlated inversely to the percentage of cytokine release with dexamethasone (106 M), of GM-CSF (r = 0.569; p < 0.01; Figure 6A), and IFN- (r = 0.556; p < 0.05; Figure 6B), such that the lower the HDAC activity, the greater the steroid insensitivity. In contrast to HDAC, HAT activity did not correlate to the degree of steroid suppression of any cytokine.
Relationship of LPS-induced Cytokine Release to HAT Activity There were significant correlations between LPS-induced cytokine release for seven cytokines (GM-CSF, IL-10, IL-1 , IL-6, IL-8, TNF- , and MIP-1 ) and HAT activity (Figure 7). In contrast, LPS-induced IFN- release was inversely correlated to HAT activity. LPS-induced cytokine release correlated with HDAC activity for only IL-6 (r = 0.39, p < 0.05) and TNF- (r = 0.43, p < 0.05).
Our results show that patients with severe asthma, defined according to ATS criteria, have diminished corticosteroid sensitivity of their circulating PBMCs when compared with patients with nonsevere asthma. We used LPS as a stimulator of these cells and measured the release of 10 cytokines. We showed that at the higher dose of 106 M of dexamethasone, there was less reduction of cytokine release in cells from patients with severe asthma compared that from patients with nonsevere asthma; however, this difference was not observed at the concentration of 108 M of dexamethasone. In addition, we found that the total activities of the two enzymes that determine histone acetylation status, HDAC and HAT, were reduced in patients with severe asthma compared with patients with nonsevere asthma, indicating potential involvement of these enzymes in determining the relative corticosteroid insensitivity in PBMCs from patients with severe asthma.
The lack of inhibition of a monocyte-derived neutrophil activating factor and of cytokines such as TNF-
Monocytes and macrophages are sensitive to LPS, which induces an array of cytokines through the transmembrane signaling receptor Toll-like receptor 4, which activates several intracellular signaling pathways, such as nuclear factor- HAT and HDAC are families of enzymes that regulate the structure of chromatin which ultimately modulates the gene expression of inflammatory genes (17). Acetylation of histones by coactivator proteins, such as cAMP response element binding (CREB)-binding protein p300 and TAFII250, which possess HAT activity, leads to DNA unwinding, which allows transcription factors and RNA polymerase II to initiate gene transcription (18). On the other hand, deacetylation of histones leads to the repression of transcription (19). It has therefore been proposed that the balance of histone acetylation and of histone deacetylation may determine the inflammatory state. Glucocorticoids have been shown to suppress inflammatory gene expression, and this effect may involve the recruitment of HDACs to the transcriptional machinery complex by the activated glucocorticoid receptor (20, 21). Changes in HDAC and HAT activity have been previously described in bronchial biopsies of patients with nonsevere asthma (21). Compared with normal subjects, these subjects had a reduction in HDAC activity and a reciprocal increase in HAT activity. In patients treated with inhaled corticosteroids, the reduction in HDAC and the increase in HAT activity were attenuated (21). Because repression of HAT activity and recruitment of HDAC activity is caused by corticosteroids in vitro (21, 22), these results were interpreted as reflecting the effect of corticosteroids in inhibiting HAT and recruiting HDAC activities. In our study, HDAC and HAT activities were significantly reduced in PBMCs from patients with severe asthma compared with patients with nonsevere asthma, indicating that changes in chromatin modification in severe asthma are more complex than the reciprocal change in the activities of HAT and HDAC described in nonsevere asthma.
Our key finding was that HDAC activity in PBMCs from patients with severe asthma was reduced when compared with patients with nonsevere asthma. Furthermore, HDAC activity in patients with nonsevere asthma was not influenced by inhaled corticosteroid use, suggesting that inhaled steroids do not contribute to changes in HDAC activity in PBMCs. The reduction in HDAC activity in PBMCs from patients with severe asthma correlated with the impairment of steroid responsiveness of GM-CSF and IFN- Prior treatment with corticosteroids was unlikely to have influenced PBMC responsiveness because we found no difference in corticosteroid sensitivity among the patients with severe asthma who took regular oral prednisolone in comparison to those that did not take oral corticosteroids. The effect of oral prednisolone therapy on corticosteroid responsiveness is unknown, but a 10-d course of prednisolone at a dose of 40 mg/d had no effect on the number or affinity of corticosteroid receptors on PBMCs (23). The reduced sensitivity of PBMCs to corticosteroid in patients with corticosteroid-dependent asthma has been reproduced by incubating PBMCs from nonasthmatic volunteers with a combination of IL-2 and IL-4, and this was associated with a reduction in affinity of the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) on PBMCs, including T cells (23, 24). In this study of steroid-dependent severe asthma, the binding affinity of dexamethasone to the glucocorticoid receptor was threefold higher than that of patients with corticosteroid-dependent asthma, which could account for the differences in cytokine inhibition by corticosteroids.
Our data show that PBMCs of patients with severe asthma express relative corticosteroid insensitivity. It is not known whether this abnormality would be reflected in lung macrophages, such as bronchoalveolar lavage macrophages. A recent study has demonstrated that nuclear translocation of the glucocorticoid receptor In summary, severe asthma is characterized by a greater degree of steroid insensitivity measured in PBMCs than nonsevere asthma, along with a reduction in HDAC and HAT activities. Our results indicate that diminished HDAC activity may be linked to the presence of relative steroid insensitivity in severe asthma, whereas reduced HAT activity probably relates to corticosteroid use rather than disease severity. Determining the mechanisms underlying impaired steroid responsiveness may yield new therapeutic targets for severe asthma.
The authors thank Dr. Trevor Hansel and Dr. Terry Tetley for the use of Luminex equipment.
Supported by NIH-RO1 grant HL-69155.
* These authors contributed equally to this article. Originally Published in Press as DOI: 10.1164/rccm.200512-1930OC on April 13, 2006 Conflict of Interest Statement: M.H. has no financial relationship with a commercial entity that has an interest in the subject of the manuscript. P.B. has no financial relationship with a commercial entity that has an interest in the subject of the manuscript. A.T. has no financial relationship with a commercial entity that has an interest in the subject of the manuscript. S.M. has no financial relationship with a commercial entity that has an interest in the subject of the manuscript. N.K. has no financial relationship with a commercial entity that has an interest in the subject of the manuscript. P.J.B. has received research funding and has served on scientific advisory boards for GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), AstraZeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim, Novartis, Altana, Scios, and Pfzier. I.A. has no financial relationship with a commercial entity that has an interest in the subject of the manuscript. K.F.C. has received $4,700 in 2005 for participation on the advisory boards of AstraZeneca, Altana, Colgene, and Novartis and $5,700 for lecturing at meetings sponsored by AstraZeneca, Altana, GSK, and Novartis. He has been reimbursed by Boehringer Ingelheim and by Novartis for traveling to international conferences. He has received an unrestricted research grant from GSK ($50,000 in 2005) and $25,000 in 2005 from Novartis for participation in a clinical trial. The Severe Asthma Research Program (SARP) is a multicenter asthma research group funded by the NHLBI and consists of the following contributors (Steering Committee members are indicated with an asterisk): Brigham and Women's HospitalElliot Israel,* Bruce D. Levy, Gautham Marigowda; Cleveland Clinic FoundationSerpil C. Erzurum,* Raed A. Dweik, Suzy A.A. Comhair, Abigail R. Lara, Marcelle Baaklini, Daniel Laskowski, Jacqueline Pyle; Emory UniversityW. Gerald Teague,* Anne M. Fitzpatrick, Eric Hunter; Imperial College School of MedicineK. Fan Chung,* Mark Hew, Pankaj Bhavsar, Alfonso Torrego, Sally Meah, Mun Lim; National Jewish Medical and Research CenterSally E. Wenzel,* Diane Rhodes; University of Pittsburgh & University of Texas Medical BranchWilliam J. Calhoun,* Bill T. Ameredes, Melissa P. Clark, Renee Folger, Rebecca Z. Wade, Dori Smith; University of VirginiaBenjamin Gaston,* Robin Kelly, Peter Urban; University of WisconsinWilliam W. Busse,* Nizar Jarjour, Erin Billmeyer, Cheri Swenson, Gina Crisafi; Wake Forest UniversityEugene R. Bleecker,* Deborah Meyers, Wendy Moore, Stephen Peters, Annette Hastie, Gregory Hawkins, Jeffrey Krings, Regina Smith; Washington University in St. LouisMario Castro,* Leonard Bacharier, Iftikhar Hussain, Jaime Tarsi; Data Coordinating CenterJames R. Murphy,* Douglas Curran-Everett; NHLBIPatricia Noel.* Received in original form December 19, 2005; accepted in final form April 12, 2006
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