October 21, 2013

Prolonged cigarette smoke exposure alters mitochondrial structure and function in airway epithelial cells

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Research

Roland F HoffmannSina ZarrintanSimone M BrandenburgArjan KolHarold G de Bruin,Shabnam JafariFreark DijkDharamdajal KalicharanMarco KeldersHarry R GoskerNick HT ten HackenJohannes J van der WantAntoon JM van Oosterhout and Irene H Heijink

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Respiratory Research 2013, 14:97 doi:10.1186/1465-9921-14-97
Published: 2 October 2013

Abstract (provisional)

Background

Cigarette smoking is the major risk factor for COPD, leading to chronic airway inflammation. We hypothesized that cigarette smoke induces structural and functional changes of airway epithelial mitochondria, with important implications for lung inflammation and COPD pathogenesis.

Methods

We studied changes in mitochondrial morphology and in expression of markers for mitochondrial capacity, damage/biogenesis and fission/fusion in the human bronchial epithelial cell line BEAS-2B upon 6-months from ex-smoking COPD GOLD stage IV patients to age-matched smoking and never-smoking controls.

Results

We observed that long-term CSE exposure induces robust changes in mitochondrial structure, including fragmentation, branching and quantity of cristae. The majority of these changes were persistent upon CSE depletion. Furthermore, long-term CSE exposure significantly increased the expression of specific fission/fusion markers (Fis1, Mfn1, Mfn2, Drp1 and Opa1), oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) proteins (Complex II, III and V), and oxidative stress (Mn-SOD) markers. These changes were accompanied by increased levels of the pro-inflammatory mediators IL-6, IL-8, and IL-1beta. Importantly, COPD primary bronchial epithelial cells (PBECs) displayed similar changes in mitochondrial morphology as observed in long-term CSE-exposure BEAS-2B cells. Moreover, expression of specific OXPHOS proteins was higher in PBECs from COPD patients than control smokers, as was the expression of mitochondrial stress marker PINK1.

Conclusion

The observed mitochondrial changes in COPD epithelium are potentially the consequence of long-term exposure to cigarette smoke, leading to impaired mitochondrial function and may play a role in the pathogenesis of COPD.

The complete article is available as a provisional PDF. The fully formatted PDF and HTML versions are in production.

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