NFAT1 Transcription Factor Regulates Pulmonary Allergic Inflammation and Airway Responsiveness
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Abstract
Allergic asthma is a chronic inflammatory disease of the lung whose
incidence and morbidity continues to rise in developed nations.
Despite being a hallmark of asthma, the molecular mechanisms that
determine airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR) are not completely
established. Transcription factors of the NFAT family are involved in
the regulation of several asthma-related genes. It has been shown
that the absence of NFAT1 leads to an increased pleural eosinophilic
allergic response accompanied by an increased production of Th2
cytokines, suggesting a role for NFAT1 in the regulation of allergic
diseases. Herein, we analyze NFAT12/2 mice to address the role of
NFAT1 in a model of allergic airway inflammation and its influence in
AHR. NFAT12/2 mice submitted to airway inflammation display
a significant exacerbation of several features of the allergic disease,
including lung inflammation, eosinophilia, and serum IgE levels,
which were concomitant with elevated Th2 cytokine production.
However, in spite of the increased allergic phenotype, NFAT12/2
mice failed to express AHR after methacholine aerosol. Refractori ness of NFAT12/2 mice to methacholine was confirmed in naı¨ve
mice, suggesting that this refractoriness occurs in an intrinsic way,
independent of the lung inflammation. In addition, NFAT12/2 mice
exhibit increased AHR in response to serotonin inhalation, suggest ing a specific role for NFAT1 in the methacholine pathway of
bronchoconstriction. Taken together, these data add support to
the interpretation that NFAT1 acts as a counterregulatory mecha nism to suppress allergic inflammation. Moreover, our findings
suggest a novel role for NFAT1 protein in airway responsiveness
mediated by the cholinergic pathway.