4.6 Article

TNF-α-Converting Enzyme/A Disintegrin and Metalloprotease-17 Mediates Mechanotransduction in Murine Tracheal Epithelial Cells

Journal

Publisher

AMER THORACIC SOC
DOI: 10.1165/rcmb.2010-0234OC

Keywords

asthma; airway remodelling; TACE

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [RO1 HL88028, RO1 HL082856, CA43793]
  2. Scleroderma Foundation

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Bronchoconstriction applies compressive stress to airway epithelial cells. We show that the application of compressive stress to cultured murine tracheal epithelial cells elicits the increased phosphorylation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) and Akt through an epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)-dependent process, consistent with previous observations of the bronchoconstriction-induced activation of EGFR in both human and murine airways. Mechanotransduction requires metalloprotease activity, indicating a pivotal role for proteolytic EGF-family ligand shedding. However, cells derived from mice with targeted deletions of the EGFR ligands Tgf alpha and Hb-egf showed only modest decreases in responses, even when combined with neutralizing antibodies to the EGFR ligands epiregulin and amphiregulin, suggesting redundant or compensatory roles for individual EGF family members in mechanotransduction. In contrast, cells harvested from mice with a conditional deletion of the gene encoding the TNF-alpha-converting enzyme (TACE/ADAM17), a sheddase for multiple EGF-family proligands, displayed a near-complete attenuation of ERK and Akt phosphorylation responses and compressive stress-induced gene regulation. Our data provide strong evidence that TACE plays a critical central role in the transduction of compressive stress.

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