Mj. Holtzman et al., CONTROL OF EPITHELIAL IMMUNE-RESPONSE GENES AND IMPLICATIONS FOR AIRWAY IMMUNITY AND INFLAMMATION, Proceedings of the Association of American Physicians, 110(1), 1998, pp. 1-11
A major goal of our research is to understand how immune cells (especi
ally T cells) infiltrate the pulmonary airway during host defense and
inflammatory disease (especially asthma). In that context, we have pro
posed that epithelial cells lining the airway provide critical biochem
ical signals for immune-cell influx and activation and that this epith
elial-immune cell interaction is a critical feature of airway inflamma
tion and hyperreactivity. In this brief report, we describe our progre
ss in defining a subset of epithelial immune-response genes the expres
sion of which is coordinated for viral defense both directly in respon
se to replicating virus and indirectly under the control of a specific
interferon-gamma signal transduction pathway featuring the Stat1 tran
scription factor as a critical relay signal between cytoplasm and nucl
eus. Unexpectedly, the same pathway is also activated during asthmatic
airway inflammation in a setting where there is no apparent infection
and no increase in interferon-gamma levels. The findings provide the
first evidence of an overactive Stat1-dependent gene network in asthma
tic airways and a novel molecular link between mucosal immunity and in
flammation. The findings also offer the possibility that overactivity
of Stat1-dependent genes might augment a subsequent T helper cell (Th1
)-type response to virus or might combine with a heightened Th2-type r
esponse to allergen to account for more severe exacerbations of asthma
.