Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1904781 Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Molecular Basis of Disease 2013 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Epithelium alterations characterize smokers with/without COPD.•p21, Ki67, PCNA, and survivin were assessed in smokers with/without COPD epithelium.•p21, survivin, and Ki67 are increased in smokers with/without COPD epithelium.•Cigarette smoke extracts promote these alterations in bronchial epithelial cells.•These alterations correlate with squamous cell metaplasia thus representing a potential pre-oncogenic hallmark.

Airway epithelium alterations, including squamous cell metaplasia, characterize smokers with and without chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The p21 regulates cell apoptosis and differentiation and its role in COPD is largely unknown. Molecules regulating apoptosis (cytoplasmic p21, caspase-3), cell cycle (nuclear p21), proliferation (Ki67/PCNA), and metaplasia (survivin) in central airways from smokers (S), smokers-COPD (s-COPD) and non-smokers (Controls) were studied. The role of cigarette smoke extracts (CSE) in p21, survivin, apoptosis (caspase-3 and annexin-V binding) and proliferation was assessed in a bronchial epithelial cell line (16HBE). Immunohistochemistry, image analysis in surgical samples and flow-cytometry and carboxyfluorescein succinimidyl ester proliferative assay in 16HBE with/without CSE were applied. Cytoplasmic and nuclear p21, survivin, and Ki67 expression significantly increased in large airway epithelium in S and in s-COPD in comparison to Controls. Caspase-3 was similar in all the studied groups. p21 correlated with epithelial metaplasia, PCNA, and Ki67 expression. CSE increased cytoplasmic p21 and survivin expression but not apoptosis and inhibited the cell proliferation in 16HBE. In large airway epithelium of smokers with and without COPD, the cytoplasmic p21 inhibits cell apoptosis, promotes cell proliferation and correlates with squamous cell metaplasia thus representing a potential pre-oncogenic hallmark.

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