Conditional Deletion of Nrf2 in Airway Epithelium Exacerbates Acute Lung Injury and Impairs the Resolution of Inflammation

NM Reddy, HR Potteti, TJ Mariani, S Biswal… - American journal of …, 2011 - atsjournals.org
NM Reddy, HR Potteti, TJ Mariani, S Biswal, SP Reddy
American journal of respiratory cell and molecular biology, 2011atsjournals.org
Oxidant stress, resulting from an excess of reactive electrophiles produced in the lung by
both resident (epithelial and endothelial) and infiltrated leukocytes, is thought to play an
obligatory role in tissue injury and abnormal repair. Previously, using a conventional (whole-
body) knockout model, we showed that antioxidative gene induction regulated by the
transcription factor Nrf2 is critical for mitigating oxidant-induced (hyperoxic) stress, as well as
for preventing and resolving tissue injury and inflammation in vivo. However, the contribution …
Oxidant stress, resulting from an excess of reactive electrophiles produced in the lung by both resident (epithelial and endothelial) and infiltrated leukocytes, is thought to play an obligatory role in tissue injury and abnormal repair. Previously, using a conventional (whole-body) knockout model, we showed that antioxidative gene induction regulated by the transcription factor Nrf2 is critical for mitigating oxidant-induced (hyperoxic) stress, as well as for preventing and resolving tissue injury and inflammation in vivo. However, the contribution to pathogenic acute lung injury (ALI) of the cellular stress produced by resident versus infiltrated leukocytes remains largely undefined in vivo. To address this critical gap in our knowledge, we generated mice with a conditional deletion of Nrf2 specifically in Clara cells, subjected these mice to hyperoxic insult, and allowed them to recover. We report that a deficiency of Nrf2 in airway epithelia alone is sufficient to contribute to the development and progression of ALI. When exposed to hyperoxia, mice lacking Nrf2 in Clara cells showed exacerbated lung injury, accompanied by greater levels of cell death and epithelial sloughing than in their wild-type littermates. In addition, we found that an Nrf2 deficiency in Clara cells is associated with a persistent inflammatory response and epithelial sloughing in the lungs during recovery from sublethal hyperoxic insult. Our results demonstrate (for the first time, to the best of our knowledge) that Nrf2 signaling in Clara cells is critical for conferring protection from hyperoxic lung injury and for resolving inflammation during the repair process.
ATS Journals