O. Tabary et al., Relationship between I kappa B alpha deficiency, NF kappa B activity and interleukin-8 production in CF human airway epithelial cells, PFLUG ARCH, 443, 2001, pp. S40-S44
Several recent reports have suggested that airway inflammation may precede
infection and relate to an endogenous dysregulation of pro-inflammatory cyt
okines in cystic fibrosis (CF) airways. Evidence suggests that activation o
f the nuclear factor kappa B (NF kappaB), which regulates the inflammatory
gene transcription, depends on the degradation of the inhibitory factor I k
appaB alpha. We show that, in in situ human Delta F508 CF bronchial tissues
, inhibitor factor I kappaB alpha is not present in gland cells, although e
ndogenous levels of chemokine IL-8 are high. These data are confirmed by st
udying cultured CF human bronchial gland cells, in which a lack of cytosoli
c I kappaB alpha. and high levels of activated NF kappaB, concomitant with
IL-8 overproduction (a 13-fold increase) are found when compared to non-CF
bronchial gland cells. Interestingly, treatment of CF gland cells with the
isoflavone genistein, a well known CFTR mutant Cl- channel stimulator, resu
lts in a significant decrease (P <0.001) in IL-8 production down to levels
released by non-CF gland cells. The addition of genistein also reverses the
effects of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) Pseudomonas-aeruginosa-induced nuclear
translocation of NF kappaB by increasing I kappaB alpha protein level (65%
) in CF gland cells. Our data indicate that the induction of I kappaB alpha
protein in CF airway glandular epithelial cells may be a novel mechanism b
y which IL-8-mediated lung inflammatory events are markedly reduced in CF p
atients, at least at the airway glandular level.