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Edinburgh Lung and the Environment Group Initiative/Colt Research Laboratories, Medical School, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom
Correspondence and requests for reprints should be addressed to W. MacNee, M.D., Respiratory Medicine, ELEGI/Colt Research Laboratories, Wilkie Building, Medical School, Teviot Place, Edinburgh EH8 9AG, UK. E-mail: w.macnee{at}ed.ac.uk
| ABSTRACT |
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Key Words: apoptosis emphysema inflammation oxidative stress proteaseantiprotease imbalance
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a slowly progressive condition characterized by airflow limitation, which is largely irreversible (1). Cigarette smoking is the main etiologic factor in this condition, far outweighing any of the other risk factors. The pathogenesis of COPD is therefore strongly linked to the effects of cigarette smoke on the lungs. There is a general relationship between the extent of the smoking history and the severity of the airflow limitation; however, there is a huge individual variation. Fletcher and Peto (2), in an 8-yr prospective study of working men in West London, showed that the average decline in FEV1 in smokers is faster (60 ml/yr) than in nonsmokers (30 ml/yr). However, smokers who develop COPD have an average decline in FEV1 of greater than 60 ml/yr, and only 15 to 20% of smokers develop clinically significant COPD. It is from these studies that the concept of the susceptible smoker developed.
| SUBTYPES OF COPD |
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The contribution of mucus hypersecretion to the airflow limitation in COPD is still uncertain. It appears that it contributes little in the early stages of COPD, because mucus production in smokers with normal lung function does not appear to predict later development of COPD (4). However, chronic mucus hypersecretion may contribute in the later stages of the disease, because of an increased risk of exacerbations that may accelerate the loss of FEV1. Chronic mucus hypersecretion may be a reflection of the inflammatory response in the submucosal glands (2). Inflammatory cells release serine proteases that are potent secretagogues for mucus (5). Oxidants derived from cigarette smoke and released from inflammatory leukocytes may also be involved in overproduction of mucin by induction of the MUC5AC gene (6).
Emphysema
Emphysema is defined as enlargement of the distal airspaces, beyond the terminal bronchioles, caused by destruction of the airway walls (7). Emphysematous lung destruction reduces maximal expiratory airflow by decreasing the elastic recoil force that drives air out of the lungs. The centrilobular or centriacinar form of emphysema results from dilation or destruction of the respiratory bronchioles and is the type of emphysema most closely associated with tobacco smoking. The panlobular or panacinar form of emphysema, which is usually associated with
1-antitrypsin (
1-AT) deficiency, results in more even dilation and destruction of the entire acinus. It has been suggested that one or the other of these types predominates in severe disease and that the centriacinar type is associated more with severe small-airway obstruction (8).
There is a relationship between the degree of emphysema and pack-yr of smoking, but not a strong one. Only about 40% of heavy smokers develop substantial lung destruction from emphysema, and emphysema can be found in some individuals who have normal lung function (3).
Small-Airway Disease
A major site of airway obstruction in COPD is the smaller conducting airways (< 2 mm in diameter) (9). Studies have shown that there are structural abnormalities in small airways in smokers with and without COPD (10). There is also a relationship between the severity of COPD and the extent of occlusion of the airway lumen by inflammatory mucous exudates. Inflammation and peribronchial fibrosis contribute to the fixed airway obstruction in the small airways in COPD, and progression of the inflammation, resulting in destruction of the alveolar attachments on the outer walls of the small airways, may also contribute.
| INFLAMMATION IN THE LUNGS IN COPD |
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Studies of bronchial biopsy specimens from patients with mild to moderate COPD show an increase in inflammatory cell infiltration in the central airways, compared with nonsmokers or smokers who have not developed the disease (12). In the bronchial mucosa in patients with COPD, T lymphocytes predominate, mainly CD8+ cells and macrophages (CD68+ cells; Table 1). It has been suggested that the presence of increased CD8+ T lymphocytes differentiates between smokers who do and do not develop COPD and that there is a correlation between T-cell numbers, the amount of alveolar destruction, and the severity of airflow limitation. However, smokers with normal lung function also show, to a lesser extent, an increased number of CD8+ cells compared with control nonsmokers (13). Indeed, there is a decrease in T-lymphocyte infiltration in bronchial biopsy specimens from subjects with severe COPD (14).
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The role of T cells in the pathogenesis of COPD is not fully understood. CD8+ cells have the potential to release tumor necrosis factor
, perforins, and granzymes, in addition to activating the FasFas ligand apoptotic pathway. An association has been shown between CD8+ cells and apoptosis of alveolar epithelial cells in subjects with emphysema (19).
Increased numbers of activated neutrophils are found in sputum from patients with COPD (20). The lack of significant increased neutrophil numbers in the lung parenchyma may be due to the fact that these cells make a rapid transit through the airways and the lung parenchyma (21). Neutrophils have the potential to secrete serum proteinases, including neutrophil elastase, cathepsin G, and proteinase 3, as well as matrix metalloproteinase 8 (MMP-8) and MMP-9. These proteases may contribute to alveolar destruction and are also potent stimuli of mucus secretion.
The role that neutrophils play in the pathogenesis of COPD is not entirely clear. Relationships have been shown between circulating neutrophils and the fall in FEV1 (22). Similarly, neutrophil numbers in bronchial biopsy specimens and induced sputum are related to disease severity (14) and the rate of decline in lung function (23).
Cigarette smoking is known to increase circulating neutrophil leukocyte count and to cause sequestration of neutrophils in the lung capillaries (24) by decreasing their deformability. Cigarette smoke also has a direct stimulatory effect on granulocyte production in the bone marrow, possibly mediated by granulocyte-macrophage colonystimulating factor and granulocyte colonystimulating factor released from macrophages (25). It is possible that neutrophils are activated within the pulmonary microcirculation to release reactive oxidant species and proteases that may have a direct injurious effect.
Once sequestered, neutrophils adhere to endothelial cells, and the adhesion molecule E-selectin has been shown to be upregulated in the airway epithelial cells of patients with COPD (26). Neutrophils can then migrate to the respiratory tract under the control of chemotactic factors, such as leukotriene B4, interleukin 8 (IL-8), and related CXC chemokines, including growth-related oncogene-
and epithelial cellderived neutrophil attractant 78. These chemotactic factors have been shown to be increased in the airways in patients with COPD (27, 28).
There is a 5- to 10-fold increase in the numbers of macrophages in the airways, lung parenchyma, and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) in patients with COPD. Macrophage numbers in the airways correlate with the severity of COPD (29). Cigarette smoke activates macrophages to release inflammatory mediators, including tumor necrosis facto
, IL-8 and other CXC chemokines, monocyte chemotactic peptide-1, leukotriene B4, and reactive oxygen species. Macrophages also secrete proteases, including MMP-2, MMP-9, and MMP-12; cathepsins K, L, and S; and neutrophil elastase, taken up from neutrophils. Compared with macrophages from normal smokers, those from patients with COPD are more activated, secrete more inflammatory proteins, and have greater elastolytic activity, which is further enhanced by exposure to cigarette smoke (30, 31). Increased numbers of macrophages in the lungs of patients with COPD and in the lungs of smokers may result from increased recruitment of monocytes from the circulation in response to monocyte chemotactic chemokines such as monocyte chemotactic peptide-1, which has been shown to be increased in sputum and BALF in patients with COPD (31). CXC chemokines also act as chemoattractants to monocytes. The concentration of growth-related oncogene-
is increased markedly in sputum and BALF from patients with COPD. Furthermore, monocytes from patients with COPD show a greater chemotactic response to growth-related oncogene-
than do cells from normal smokers and nonsmokers (32).
There is an increased number of dendritic cells in the airways and alveolar walls of smokers (33). The role of dendritic cells in COPD is not yet defined, but they may have an important function in the innate and adaptive immune responses in COPD.
Airway epithelial cells can be activated by cigarette smoke to produce inflammatory mediators, including tumor necrosis factor
, IL-1ß, granulocyte-macrophage colonystimulating factor, and IL-8. The epithelium in the small airways may be an important source of transforming growth factor ß (TGF-ß), adding to the induction of local fibrosis (34). Epithelial cells can also secrete antioxidants, secrete antiproteases, and transport immunoglobulin-
, so they may be involved in adaptive immunity. Cigarette smoke may impair these innate and adaptive immune responses of the airway epithelium and increase the likelihood of infection.
Many of the inflammatory mediators that are expressed in COPD are controlled by the transcription factor nuclear factor (NF)-
B, which is upregulated in alveolar macrophages in patients with COPD and in airway cells in patients with mild/moderate COPD in comparison with control nonsmokers (35). Upregulation of NF-
B in lung cells in COPD may be a key molecular mechanism involved in the ongoing inflammatory process in the airways.
In general, with increasing severity of COPD there is a further enhancement of the inflammatory response. Compared with mild/moderate disease, there is a further increase in expression of inflammatory proteins such as macrophage inflammatory protein 1
, a chemokine involved in the activation of mononuclear cells and granulocytes. There are also further increases in the number of neutrophils and macrophages in severe disease and a decrease in T lymphocytes (CD3+ cells). There appears to be a shift in the cellular type in severe disease toward cells with a phagocytic and proteolytic role in the bronchial tissues (Tables 13).
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The inflammatory response in the peripheral airways may play a role in the fibrosis that characterizes the small airways in patients with moderate/severe COPD. Studies that have assessed tissue obtained from lung volume reduction surgery in patients with severe COPD have shown an increase in total leukocytes and in CD4+ and CD8+ lymphocytes in both the peripheral airways and the lung parenchyma (12). In contrast, smokers with normal lung function show an increased number of macrophages and T lymphocytes in lung parenchyma compared with control nonsmokers, with no changes in CD4+ and CD8+ cells. In patients with mild to moderate COPD there is an increase in CD8+ cells in the alveolar septae compared with control nonsmokers (37, 38), and there is no change in the numbers of neutrophils, macrophages, or CD4+ cells.
| PROTEASES AND ANTIPROTEASES |
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1-ATdeficient patients. Elastin is an important target for proteolytic enzymes, and its destruction results in loss of elasticity in the lung parenchyma. Elastin is the principal component of elastic fibers and is secreted from several cell types as a precursor, tropoelastin. These tropoelastin molecules become aligned in the extracellular space on microfibrils. Under the action of lysyl oxidase, the lysine residues in tropoelastin are modified, which causes the tropoelastin monomers to cross-link and form larger, insoluble elastin polymers. Because the cross-links, known as desmosines, are unique to elastin, they have been used as a marker of elastin degradation (39). Desmosine and elastin peptides are elevated in smokers and patients with COPD. However, there has been controversy over the specificity of measurements of these peptides in urine, particularly as a reflection of lung elastin degradation alone, because of the extreme durability of lung elastin. There is minimal elastin turnover in normal subjects, so breakdown products should not be detectable. Nevertheless, studies indicate that the annual rate of decline in FEV1 in a group of smokers correlated positively with urine levels of desmosine (40). The validity of the use of desmosine or elastin peptides as a marker of elastolysis remains unresolved.
Together with destruction of elastin, inactivation of antiproteases is central to the proteaseantiprotease imbalance hypothesis. Early studies showed that the function of
1-AT was reduced by about 40% in smokers, compared with nonsmokers (41). This "functional
1-AT deficiency" was believed to be due to inactivation of
1-AT by oxidants in cigarette smoke. However, most of the
1-AT in cigarette smokers remains active and is therefore still capable of protecting against the increased protease burden. There is only a transient and nonsignificant fall in
1-AT activity in BALF 1 h after smoking (42). Thus, studies assessing the function of
1-AT in either chronic or acute cigarette smoking have not been definitive. It is clear, however, that the hypothesis that the major event is an imbalance between an increased elastase burden in the lungs and a "functional deficiency" of
1-AT, because of its inactivation, is an oversimplification.
As discussed above, there is substantial evidence that the numbers of neutrophils and macrophages are increased in the airspaces in chronic smokers. The elastase burden could be increased in cigarette smokers by enhanced degranulation and therefore release of elastase. There is some evidence to support this, because neutrophils isolated from patients with emphysema show greater elastase-induced fibronectin degradation in vitro than do cells from control subjects matched for age and smoking history (43).
Further hypotheses have invoked a contributory role for other antiproteases, such as antileukoprotease, or more subtle changes, for example, a decrease in the association rate constant of
1-AT for neutrophil elastase, which may contribute to elastin degradation
Elastin Synthesis and Repair
There is some evidence supporting the concept that an abnormality in elastin synthesis and repair may be involved in the pathogenesis of emphysema. In animal models of intratracheal instillation of elastases, lung elastin is depleted within hours to a few days (44), followed by increased elastin synthesis over a period of weeks. However, in areas of emphysema in these models, alveolar elastic fibers have an abnormal appearance (45) and resemble the aberrant elastic fibers in human emphysema. Thus, although elastin synthesis after injury restores the elastin content of the lungs, it does not restore normal lung architecture in these experimental models.
In an animal model of elastase-induced emphysema, treatment with retinoic acid restored normal alveolar architecture. These studies in adult male rats (which have continued lung growth throughout their adult life, in contrast with humans) must be verified, but they provide some intriguing evidence that the destructive process in emphysema, which was always considered irreversible, may be capable of repair (46).
In addition to serum proteases, cysteine proteases (cathepsins) may have a role in COPD. Cathepsin C was induced in mice by overexpression of IFN-
, which induces emphysema (47). Cathepsin inhibitors have been shown to reduce emphysema induced by overexpression of IL-13 in mouse lung (48). Cathepsin L has been detected in BALF from patients with emphysema (49), and alveolar macrophages in patients with COPD secrete more cysteine proteases than do macrophages from normal smokers or nonsmokers (50).
There is increasing interest in the role of MMPs in COPD (51). Increased concentrations of MMP-1 (collagenase) and MMP-9 (gelatinase B) are present in BALF from patients with COPD (52, 53), and there is increased activity of MMP-9 in the lung parenchyma of patients with emphysema (54, 55). MMP-1 expression is also increased in the lungs of patients with emphysema, particularly in type II pneumocytes (56). Alveolar macrophages from smokers express more MMP-9 than do those from normal subjects (30), and there is an even greater increase in patients with COPD (29). Animal models have shown that cigarette smokeinduced emphysema does not occur in mice lacking MMP-12. In such mice, emphysema induced by IL-13 or IFN-
expression is also reduced (48), associated with a marked reduction in monocyte recruitment to the lungs. MMPs are also known to activate the latent form of TGF-ß to its active form. In mice lacking the integrin
vß6, there is a failure to activate TGF-ß, and the animals do not develop age-related emphysema, which can be prevented by overexpression of TGF-ß1 (57). These data suggest that TGF-ß1 may downregulate MMP-12 under normal conditions and that the absence of TGF-ß results in excessive MMP-12 production and emphysema.
Mice lacking MMP-9 are not protected against emphysema caused by cigarette smoke but are protected from small-airway fibrosis (58). TGF-ß is activated by MMP-9, and this mechanism could provide a link between enhanced elastolytic activity by MMP-9 and the simultaneous production of fibrosis by activation of TGF-ß. It appears that, although MMP-12 is an important protease in the mouse, it is not as important in humans as MMP-9. Macrophages from patients with COPD have a blunted response to stimuli for the release of tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase 1, which would favor increased elastolysis (29).
| ROLE OF OXIDANTS AND ANTIOXIDANTS IN SMOKING-INDUCED COPD |
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A delicate balance exists between the toxicity of oxidants and the protective effects of intra- and extracellular antioxidant defense systems, which are critically important for the maintenance of normal pulmonary cellular functions. A shift of the oxidant/antioxidant balance in favor of oxidants is known as oxidative stress. There is now considerable evidence of increased oxidative stress in smokers and in patients with COPD (59).
Cigarette smoke contains free radicals in both the gas and tar phases (60). Short-lived radicals in the gas phase of cigarette smoke may be quenched immediately in the lung epithelial lining fluid; however, redox reactions in cigarette smoke condensate may produce reactive oxygen species for a considerable time.
The oxidant burden in lungs may be further enhanced in smokers by the increased numbers of neutrophils and macrophages in the alveolar space. In vitro studies have shown that alveolar leukocytes from cigarette smokers spontaneously release increased amounts of oxidants, such as O2· and H2O2, compared with those from nonsmokers (61).
Components of the lung matrix (e.g., elastin and collagen) can be directly damaged by oxidants in cigarette smoke (62). Furthermore, cigarette smoke can interfere with elastin synthesis and repair (63), potentially leading to the development of emphysema.
All tissues are vulnerable to oxidant damage, but by virtue of its direct contact with the environment, the airspace epithelial surface of the lung is particularly vulnerable. Injury to the epithelium, manifested as an increase in airspace epithelial permeability, may be an important early event after exposure to cigarette smoke (64). Extra- and intracellular glutathione, an antioxidant, appears to be critical to the maintenance of epithelial integrity after exposure to cigarette smoke. This was shown in studies in which the increased permeability of epithelial cell monolayers in vitro, and in rat lungs in vivo, after exposure to cigarette smoke condensate, was associated with profound changes in the homeostasis of glutathione (65, 66).
These in vitro and animal studies are paralleled by human studies demonstrating increased epithelial permeability in chronic smokers compared with nonsmokers, with a further increase in epithelial permeability after acute smoking (67). Thus, cigarette smoke has a detrimental effect on alveolar epithelial cell function that is, in part, oxidant mediated.
A major site of free radical attack is on polyunsaturated fatty acids in cell membranes producing lipid peroxidation, a process that may continue as a chain reaction to generate hydroperoxides and long-lived aldehydes. Levels of products of lipid peroxidation in plasma and BALF are significantly increased in healthy smokers and patients with acute exacerbations of COPD, compared with healthy nonsmokers (64, 67, 68).
Several studies demonstrate increased levels of oxidants in exhaled air or breath condensates (69), although measurements of exhaled breath condensate have inherent problems and standardization of this technique has still to be accomplished. There is an increased concentration of H2O2 in exhaled breath condensate in patients with COPD (70). Concentrations of a lipid peroxidation product in exhaled breath condensate are increased even in patients who are ex-smokers (Figure 1) (71). Furthermore, there is evidence that oxidative stress can cause increased lipid peroxidation in lung tissue in patients with COPD compared with smokers who have a similar smoking history but have not developed the disease (72). In that study, the level of lipid peroxidation correlated with the degree of airflow limitation (Figure 2).
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The major antioxidants in respiratory tract lining fluid include mucin, reduced glutathione, uric acid, protein (largely albumin), and ascorbic acid (74). There is limited information about respiratory epithelial antioxidant defenses in smokers, and even less about those in patients with COPD. Studies have shown that glutathione is elevated in BALF from chronic smokers (64, 75). Even so, glutathione may not be present in sufficient quantities to deal with the excessive oxidant burden during acute smoking, as cigarette smoke exposure depletes glutathione in a dose- and time-dependent manner (76).
Reduced levels of vitamin E are present in the BALF of smokers compared with nonsmokers (77). By contrast, other studies found a marginal increase in vitamin C in the BALF of smokers, compared with nonsmokers (78). The apparent discrepancy may be due to different smoking histories in chronic smokers, in particular the time of smoking the last cigarette in relation to the sampling of BALF.
Expression of glutathione peroxidase and superoxide dismutase, another antioxidant enzyme, is elevated in the lungs of rats exposed to cigarette smoke (79, 80).
| OTHER MECHANISMS RELATED TO THE PATHOGENESIS OF COPD |
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B, and consequently increased release of IL-8 in response to cell activation and increased production of TGF-ß, suggesting a molecular mechanism for the amplification of inflammatory response (84, 85). A further mechanism that may amplify inflammation in COPD may be imbalance between histone acetylation and deacetylation, resulting in chromatin remodeling to a configuration that enhances inflammatory gene expression. Macrophages of cigarette smokers show a decrease in histone deacetylase activity (86), as has also been shown in the lungs of smoke-exposed animals (87). Decreased histone deacetylation enhances DNA unwinding and hence increases transcription of inflammatory genes. Preliminary evidence also suggests that histone deacetylase protein and activity are reduced in lung tissue in COPD, which may be the mechanism that enhances lung inflammation (88, 89).
There is evidence that smoking cessation does not resolve the inflammatory response in the airways, particularly in advanced COPD. Molecular mechanisms such as transcription factor activation and chromatin remodeling, perhaps as a result of increased oxidative stress, might be responsible for perpetuating the inflammatory process.
Gene expression profiling (90, 91) of human lung tissue from smokers and smokers with severe emphysema suggests an increase in transcripts encoding proteins involving inflammation immune responses and proteolysis, and differences in gene profiling have been found between patients with emphysema that is induced by cigarette smoking and patients with emphysema that is related to
1-antitrypsin. Such studies of gene profiling in human lung tissue should provide insight into the pathogenesis and may allow distinction between different phenotypes of disease and identify targets for therapeutic intervention.
Apoptosis and Emphysema
As explained previously, the traditional paradigm for alveolar wall destruction in emphysema has been that increased inflammatory response results in a proteaseantiprotease imbalance. Now, studies have demonstrated apoptosis in human emphysematous lungs (92, 93). A hypothesis has been advanced that the alveolar cell loss in emphysema is due to apoptosis in response to cigarette smoke, mediated by blockade of the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) receptor that occurs in emphysematous lungs. Indeed, rats in which VEGF receptors have been blocked develop emphysema (94). Decreased levels of VEGF in induced sputum have been shown to correlate with the degree of airflow limitation and alveolar destruction in patients with emphysema (95). Furthermore, mice develop emphysema after a single intratracheal injection of active caspase-3, an inducer of apoptosis, plus a protein transfection agent (96). Another study has shown that oxidative stress and apoptosis interact in rats and cause emphysema due to VEGF receptor blockade (Figure 3) (97).
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| FOOTNOTES |
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Conflict of Interest Statement: W.M. has been reimbursed for travel by GlaxoSmithKline, Zambon, AstraZeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim, Pfizer, and Micromet for attending conferences. He has received honoraria from GlaxoSmithKline, AstraZeneca, Zambon, and Pfizer for participating as a speaker in scientific meetings. He serves on advisory boards for GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Almirall, Amgen, Bayer, and Micromet. He serves as a consultant for Pfizer and SMB Pharmaceuticals. Research grants to support work carried out in his laboratory come from SMB, Pfizer, Ceremedix, GlaxoSmithKline, Chugi, and Novartis.
(Received in original form April 22, 2005; accepted in final form June 1, 2005)
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L. M. Fabbri, F. Luppi, B. Beghe, and K. F. Rabe Update in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease 2005. Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med., May 15, 2006; 173(10): 1056 - 1065. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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