4.5 Article

Ginger and its bioactive component 6-shogaol mitigate lung inflammation in a murine asthma model

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajplung.00249.2019

Keywords

cAMP; flexiVent; house dust mite antigen; phosphodiesterase; regulatory T cell

Funding

  1. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHBLI) [HL140102]
  2. NHBLI Grant [HL132203, HL143052, HL122340]
  3. National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (NCCIH) Grant [AT009989]
  4. Office of the Director, National Institutes of Health [S10RR027050]

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Asthma, a common disorder associated with airway inflammation and hyperresponsiveness, remains a significant clinical burden in need of novel therapeutic strategies. Patients are increasingly seeking complementary and alternative medicine approaches to control their symptoms, including the use of natural products. Ginger, a natural product that we previously demonstrated acutely relaxes airway smooth muscle (ASM), has long been reported to possess anti-inflammatory properties, although a precise mechanistic understanding is lacking. In these studies, we demonstrate that chronic administration of whole ginger extract or 6-shogaol, a bioactive component of ginger, mitigates in vivo house dust mite antigen-mediated lung inflammation in mice. We further show that this decrease in inflammation is associated with reduced in vivo airway responsiveness. Utilizing in vitro studies, we demonstrate that 6-shogaol augments cAMP concentrations in CD4 cells, consistent with phosphodiesterase inhibition, and limits the induction of nuclear factor-kappa B signaling and the production of proinflammatory cytokines in activated CD4 cells. Sustained elevations in cAMP concentration are well known to inhibit effector T cell function. Interestingly, regulatory T cells (Tregs) utilize cAMP as a mediator of their immunosuppressive effects, and we demonstrate here that 6-shogaol augments the Treg polarization of naive CD4 cells in vitro. Taken together with previous reports, these studies suggest that ginger and 6-shogaol have the potential to combat asthma via two mechanisms: acute ASM relaxation and chronic inhibition of inflammation.

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