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Induction of pulmonary antibodies against oxidized...
Journal article

Induction of pulmonary antibodies against oxidized lipids in mice exposed to cigarette smoke

Abstract

BackgroundChronic cigarette smoke exposure is known to activate the adaptive immune system; however, the functional role of these processes is currently unknown. Given the role of oxidized lipids in driving innate inflammatory responses to cigarette smoke, we investigated whether an adaptive immune response against damaged lipids was induced following chronic cigarette smoke exposure.Methods and resultsUsing a well-established mouse model, we showed that cigarette smoke exposure led to a progressive increase in pulmonary antibodies against oxidized low-density lipoprotein (OxLDL). Functionally, we found that intranasal delivery of an antibody against oxidized phosphatidylcholine (anti-OxPC; clone E06) increased lipid and particle uptake by pulmonary macrophages without exacerbating cigarette smoke-induced neutrophilia. We also found that anti-OxPC treatment increased particle uptake following smoking cessation. Finally, the frequency of pulmonary macrophages with internalized particles was increased after prolonged smoke exposure, at which time lung anti-OxPC responses were highest.ConclusionsAltogether, this is the first report to demonstrate a non-pathogenic, and possibly protective, function of a newly identified autoantibody induced by chronic cigarette smoke exposure.

Authors

Thayaparan D; Shen P; Stämpfli MR; Morissette MC

Journal

Respiratory Research, Vol. 17, No. 1,

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

August 4, 2016

DOI

10.1186/s12931-016-0416-6

ISSN

1465-9921

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