Am. J. Respir. Cell Mol. Biol., Vol 14, No. 4, 04 1996, 348-355.
Plasmid-liposome transfer of the alpha 1 antitrypsin gene to cystic fibrosis bronchial epithelial cells prevents elastase-induced cell detachment and cytokine release
AE Canonico, KL Brigham, LC Carmichael, JD Plitman, GA King, TR Blackwell and JW Christman
Department of Medicine, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee 37232-2650, USA.
Human neutrophil elastase (NE) stimulates release of neutrophil chemotactic
activity by a bronchial epithelial cell line and from nasal epithelial
cells. In this article, we show that NE stimulates the production of
neutrophil chemotactic activity by 2CFSMEo-cells, a transformed cystic
fibrosis bronchial epithelial cell line. The production of chemotactic
activity is dose- and time-dependent and can be blocked by preincubation of
NE with alpha 1 antitrypsin (alpha1AT). Incubation of the NE-stimulated
culture supernatant with neutralizing concentrations of rabbit anti-human
interleukin 8 antibody completely neutralizes the chemotactic activity.
Transfection of 2CFSMEo- cells with the eukaryotic expression vector
pCMV4alpha1AT, complexed to cationic liposomes in a 1:3 wt/wt ratio,
results in at least a 10-fold increase in measured human alpha1AT protein
in culture supernatant. Detection of human alpha1AT mRNA by reverse
transcriptase polymerase chain reaction in total RNA from transfected, but
not untransfected cells, confirms successful gene transfer. Compared with
untransfected cells, transfer of the human alpha1AT gene decreases
chemotactic activity in culture supernatant and prevents cell detachment
after NE exposure. Our data indicate that alpha1AT gene transfer is capable
of blocking at least some of the biological effects of free elastase on
cultured epithelial cells.