4.7 Article

A mechanism for matrikine regulation in acute inflammatory lung injury

Journal

JCI INSIGHT
Volume 6, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC CLINICAL INVESTIGATION INC
DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.140750

Keywords

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Funding

  1. American Heart Association [16SDG27040000]
  2. NIH [HL135710, HL102371, HL153113, 5T32HL105346-09]
  3. Veterans Administration [101CX001969]
  4. Ismail Moustapha Scholar Fund

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In acute inflammation, the peptides Proline-glycine-proline and its acetylated form are actively transported from the lung by the oligopeptide transporter PEPT2, leading to increased levels of these peptides in the lung and enhanced lung inflammation. Blocking the PEPT2 transporter may serve as a potential therapeutic target to modulate acute inflammation.
Proline-glycine-proline (PGP) and its acetylated form (Ac-PGP) are neutrophil chemoattractants generated by collagen degradation, and they have been shown to play a role in chronic inflammatory disease. However, the mechanism for matrikine regulation in acute inflammation has not been well established. Here, we show that these peptides are actively transported from the lung by the oligopeptide transporter, PEPT2. Following intratracheal instillation of Ac-PGP in a mouse model, there was a rapid decline in concentration of the labeled peptide in the bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) over time and redistribution to extrapulmonary sites. In vitro knockdown of the PEPT2 transporter in airway epithelia or use of a competitive inhibitor of PEPT2, cefadroxil, significantly reduced uptake of Ac-PGP. Animals that received intratracheal Ac-PGP plus cefadroxil had higher levels of Ac-PGP in BAL and lung tissue. Utilizing an acute LPS-induced lung injury model, we demonstrate that PEPT2 blockade enhanced pulmonary Ac-PGP levels and lung inflammation. We further validated this effect using clinical samples from patients with acute lung injury in coculture with airway epithelia. This is the first study to our knowledge to determine the in vitro and in vivo significance of active matrikine transport as a mechanism of modulating acute inflammation and to demonstrate that it may serve as a potential therapeutic target.

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