Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3258241 Clinical Immunology 2007 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

Direct infection of respiratory epithelium induces chemokine secretion and upregulates cytokine networks, which are central in regulating inflammation. IL-1β may have a pivotal role in such networks. Differential control of chemokine secretion within specific airway regions, which have distinct roles in immunity, is not well characterized. We investigated IL-1β-induced CXCL8 and CCL5 secretion from primary normal human bronchial and small airway epithelial cells, and the alveolar cell line A549. CXCL8 was secreted by all cells, but only lower airway cells secreted CCL5. IL-1β induced nuclear translocation of NF-κB (p50, p65 and c-Rel subunits), NF-IL-6 and AP-1, each with distinct kinetics. This was associated with high level CCL5 promoter activation, via transcription factor binding to multiple regions, including NF-κB, AP-1 and NF-IL-6 sites. The IL-1-related cytokine IL-18 did not drive or modulate IL-1β-induced CXCL8 or CCL5 secretion. In summary, IL-1β, but not IL-18, induces transcription-dependent lower airway epithelial cell-specific CCL5 secretion. Differential chemokine secretion may have profound effects on local leukocyte influx within upper or lower airways exposed to airway infection or environmental stimuli, which might then require different anti-inflammatory strategies.

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