Human Rhinovirus Infection of the Respiratory Tract Affects Sphingolipid Synthesis. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • The 17q21 asthma susceptibility locus includes asthma risk alleles associated with decreased sphingolipid synthesis, likely resulting from increased expression of ORMDL3. ORMDL3 inhibits serine-palmitoyl transferase (SPT), the rate limiting enzyme of de novo sphingolipid synthesis. There is evidence that decreased sphingolipid synthesis is critical to asthma pathogenesis. Children with asthma and 17q21 asthma risk alleles display decreased sphingolipid synthesis in blood cells. Reduced SPT activity results in airway hyperreactivity, a hallmark feature of asthma. 17q21 asthma risk alleles are also linked to childhood infections with human rhinovirus (RV). This study evaluates the interaction of RV with the de novo sphingolipid synthesis pathway, and the alterative effects of concurrent SPT inhibition in SPT-deficient mice and human airway epithelial cells. In mice, RV infection shifted lung sphingolipid synthesis gene expression to a pattern that resembles genetic SPT deficiency, including decreased expression of Sptssa, a small SPT subunit. This pattern was pronounced in lung EpCAM+ epithelial cells and reproduced in human bronchial epithelial cells. RV did not affect Sptssa expression in lung CD45+ immune cells. RV increased sphingolipids unique to the de novo synthesis pathway in mouse lung and human airway epithelial cells. Interestingly, these de novo sphingolipid species were reduced in the blood of RV infected, wild-type mice. RV exacerbated SPT-deficiency-associated airway hyperreactivity. Airway inflammation was similar in RV-infected wild-type and SPT deficient mice. This study reveals the effects of RV infection on the de novo sphingolipid synthesis pathway, elucidating a potential mechanistic link between 17q21 asthma risk alleles and rhinoviral infection.

publication date

  • December 1, 2021

Research

keywords

  • Membrane Proteins
  • Rhinovirus

Identity

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1165/rcmb.2021-0443OC

PubMed ID

  • 34851798