Author: Bai, Haiqing; Si, Longlong; Jiang, Amanda; Belgur, Chaitra; Plebani, Roberto; Oh, Crystal; Rodas, Melissa; Nurani, Atiq; Gilpin, Sarah; Powers, Rani K.; Goyal, Girija; Baun, Rachelle Prantil-; Ingber, Donald E.
Title: Mechanical control of innate immune responses against viral infection revealed in a human Lung Alveolus Chip Cord-id: hxecmwum Document date: 2021_4_27
ID: hxecmwum
Snippet: Mechanical forces associated with breathing play a fundamental role in lung development and disease but the molecular pathways remain largely unknown. Here, we used a mechanically actuatable Human Lung Alveolus Chip that recapitulates human lung alveolar type I and type II cell differentiation, alveolar-capillary interface formation, and genome-wide gene expression profiles characteristic of the distal lung to investigate the role of physical forces associated with cyclic breathing motions in lu
Document: Mechanical forces associated with breathing play a fundamental role in lung development and disease but the molecular pathways remain largely unknown. Here, we used a mechanically actuatable Human Lung Alveolus Chip that recapitulates human lung alveolar type I and type II cell differentiation, alveolar-capillary interface formation, and genome-wide gene expression profiles characteristic of the distal lung to investigate the role of physical forces associated with cyclic breathing motions in lung innate immune responses to viral infection. When the mechanically active Alveolus Chips are infected with the influenza H3N2 virus, a cascade of host responses is elicited on-chip, including increased production of cytokines and expression of inflammation-associated genes in pulmonary epithelial and endothelial cells, resulting in enhanced recruitment of circulating immune cells as occurs during viral infection in vivo. Surprisingly, studies carried out in parallel with static chips revealed that physiological breathing motions suppress viral replication by activating protective innate immune responses in epithelial and endothelial cells. This is mediated at least in part through upregulation of S100 calcium-binding protein A7 (S100A7), which binds to the Receptor for Advanced Glycation End Products (RAGE), an inflammatory mediator that is most highly expressed in the lung alveolus in vivo. This mechano-immunological control mechanism is further supported by the finding that existing RAGE inhibitor drugs can suppress the production of inflammatory cytokines in response to influenza virus infection in this model. S100A7-RAGE interactions and modulation of mechanical ventilation parameters could therefore serve as new targets for therapeutic intervention in patients infected with influenza and other potential pandemic viruses that cause life-threatening lung inflammation.
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