Regular article
Cardiovascular, pulmonary, and renal pathology
Unopposed Cathepsin G, Neutrophil Elastase, and Proteinase 3 Cause Severe Lung Damage and Emphysema

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajpath.2014.04.015Get rights and content
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Cigarette smoking is a major factor for the development of pulmonary emphysema because it induces abnormal inflammation and a protease-rich local milieu that causes connective tissue breakdown of the lungs. As a result of its capacity to degrade lung tissue and the high risk of patients lacking α1-antitrypsin to develop emphysema, much interest has focused on neutrophil elastase (NE). Two similar neutrophil serine proteases (NSPs), cathepsin G and proteinase 3, coexist with NE in humans and mice, but their potential tissue-destructive role(s) remains unclear. Using a gene-targeting approach, we observed that in contrast to their wild-type littermates, mice deficient in all three NSPs were substantially protected against lung tissue destruction after long-term exposure to cigarette smoke. In exploring the underlying basis for disrupted wild-type lung air spaces, we found that active NSPs collectively caused more severe lung damage than did NE alone. Furthermore, NSP activities unleashed increased activity of the tissue-destructive proteases macrophage elastase (matrix metalloproteinase-12) and gelatinase B (matrix metalloproteinase-9). These in vivo data provide, for the first time, compelling evidence of the collateral involvement of cathepsin G, NE, and proteinase 3 in cigarette smoke–induced tissue damage and emphysema. They also reveal a complex positive feed-forward loop whereby these NSPs induce the destructive potential of other proteases, thereby generating a chronic and pathogenic protease-rich milieu.

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Supported by grants from Inserm Avenir Program, Fondation pour la Recherche Médicale, Agence Nationale de la Recherche, and Contrats Projets Etat-Région and by funding from the European Union Seventh Framework Program (FP7/2007-2013).

Disclosures: None declared.