Pneumonia causes short‐ and long‐term cognitive dysfunction in a high proportion of patients, although the mechanism(s) responsible for this effect are unknown. Here, we tested the hypothesis that pneumonia‐elicited cytotoxic amyloid and tau variants: (1) are present in the circulation during infection; (2) lead to impairment of long‐term potentiation; and, (3) inhibit long‐term potentiation dependent upon tau. Cytotoxic amyloid and tau species were recovered from the blood and the hippocampus following pneumonia, and they were present in the extracorporeal membrane oxygenation oxygenators of patients with pneumonia, especially in those who died. Introduction of immunopurified blood‐borne amyloid and tau into either the airways or the blood of uninfected animals acutely and chronically impaired hippocampal information processing. In contrast, the infection did not impair long‐term potentiation in tau knockout mice and the amyloid‐ and tau‐dependent disruption in hippocampal signaling was less severe in tau knockout mice. Moreover, the infection did not elicit cytotoxic amyloid and tau variants in tau knockout mice. Therefore, pneumonia initiates a tauopathy that contributes to cognitive dysfunction.
Caspases-3 and -7 are executioner caspases whose enzymatic activity is necessary to complete apoptotic cell death. Here, we questioned whether endothelial cell infection leads to caspase-3/7-mediated cell death. Pulmonary microvascular endothelial cells (PMVECs) were infected with Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA103). PA103 caused cell swelling with a granular appearance, paralleled by intracellular caspase-3/7 activation and cell death. In contrast, PMVEC infection with ExoY+ (PA103 ΔexoUexoT::Tc pUCPexoY) caused cell rounding, but it did not activate intracellular caspase-3/7 and it did not cause cell death. However, ExoY+ led to a time-dependent accumulation of active caspase-7, but not caspase-3, in the supernatant, independent of apoptosis. To study the function of extracellular caspase-7, caspase-7- and caspase-3-deficient PMVECs were generated using CRISPR/Cas9 technology. Caspase-7 activity was significantly reduced in supernatants from infected caspase-7 deficient cells, but was unchanged in supernatants from infected caspase-3 deficient cells, indicating an uncoupling in the mechanism of activation of these two enzymes. Since ExoY+ leads to release of heat stable amyloid cytotoxins that are responsible for transmissible cytotoxicity, we next questioned whether caspase-7 contributes to the severity of this process. Supernatant obtained from infected caspase-7 deficient cells displayed significantly reduced transmissible cytotoxicity when compared to supernatant from infected wild type controls, illustrating an essential role for caspase-7 in promoting the potency of transmissible cytotoxicity. Thus, we report a mechanism whereby ExoY+ infection induces active caspase-7 accumulation in the extracellular space, independent from both caspase-3 and cell death, where it modulates ExoY+-induced transmissible cytotoxicity.
Activation of the inflammasome-caspase-1 axis in lung endothelial cells is emerging as a novel arm of the innate immune response to pneumonia and sepsis caused by Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Increased levels of circulating autacoids are hallmarks of pneumonia and sepsis and induce physiological responses via cAMP signaling in targeted cells. However, it is unknown whether cAMP affects other functions, such as P. aeruginosa-induced caspase-1 activation. Herein, we describe the effects of cAMP signaling on caspase-1 activation using a single cell flow cytometry-based assay. P. aeruginosa infection of cultured lung endothelial cells caused caspase-1 activation in a distinct population of cells. Unexpectedly, pharmacological cAMP elevation increased the total number of lung endothelial cells with activated caspase-1. Interestingly, addition of cAMP agonists augmented P. aeruginosa infection of lung endothelial cells as a partial explanation underlying cAMP priming of caspase-1 activation. The cAMP effect(s) appeared to function as a priming signal because addition of cAMP agonists was required either before or early during the onset of infection. However, absolute cAMP levels measured by ELISA were not predictive of cAMP-priming effects. Importantly, inhibition of de novo cAMP synthesis decreased the number of lung endothelial cells with activated caspase-1 during infection. Collectively, our data suggest that lung endothelial cells rely on cAMP signaling to prime caspase-1 activation during P. aeruginosa infection.
KD025 is a ROCK2 inhibitor currently being tested in clinical trials for the treatment of fibrotic lung diseases. The therapeutic effects of KD025 are partly due to its inhibition of profibrotic pathways and fat metabolism. However, whether KD025 affects pulmonary microvascular endothelial cell (PMVEC) function is unknown, despite evidence that alveolar-capillary membrane disruption constitutes major causes of death in fibrotic lung diseases. We hypothesized that KD025 regulates PMVEC metabolism, pH, migration, and survival, a series of interrelated functional characteristics that determine pulmonary barrier integrity. We used PMVECs isolated from Sprague Dawley rats. KD025 dose-dependently decreased lactate production and glucose consumption. The inhibitory effect of KD025 was more potent compared with other metabolic modifiers, including 2-deoxy-glucose, extracellular acidosis, dichloroacetate, and remogliflozin. Interestingly, KD025 increased oxidative phosphorylation, whereas 2-deoxy-glucose did not. KD025 also decreased intracellular pH and induced a compensatory increase in anion exchanger 2. KD025 inhibited PMVEC migration, but fasudil (nonspecific ROCK inhibitor) did not. We tested endothelial permeability in vivo using Evans Blue dye in the bleomycin pulmonary fibrosis model. Baseline permeability was decreased in KD025-treated animals independent of bleomycin treatment. Under hypoxia, KD025 increased PMVEC necrosis as indicated by increased lactate dehydrogenase release and propidium iodide uptake and decreased ATP; it did not affect Annexin V binding. ROCK2 knockdown had no effect on PMVEC metabolism, pH, and migration, but it increased nonapoptotic caspase-3 activity. Together, we report that KD025 promotes oxidative phosphorylation; decreases glycolysis, intracellular pH, and migration; and strengthens pulmonary barrier integrity in a ROCK2-independent manner.
The Gram-negative, opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa utilizes a type III secretion system to inject exoenzyme effectors into a target host cell. Of the four best-studied exoenzymes, ExoU causes rapid cell damage and death. ExoU is a phospholipase A2 (PLA2) that hydrolyses host cell membranes, and P. aeruginosa strains expressing ExoU are associated with poor outcomes in critically ill patients with pneumonia. While the effects of ExoU on lung epithelial and immune cells are well studied, a role for ExoU in disrupting lung endothelial cell function has only recently emerged. Lung endothelial cells maintain a barrier to fluid and protein flux into tissue and airspaces and regulate inflammation. Herein, we describe a pulmonary microvascular endothelial cell (PMVEC) culture infection model to examine the effects of ExoU. Using characterized P. aeruginosa strains and primary clinical isolates, we show that strains expressing ExoU disrupt PMVEC barrier function by causing substantial PMVEC damage and lysis, in a PLA2-dependent manner. In addition, we show that strains expressing ExoU activate the pro-inflammatory caspase-1, in a PLA2-dependent manner. Considering the important roles for mitochondria and oxidative stress in regulating inflammatory responses, we next examined the effects of ExoU on reactive oxygen species production. Infection of PMVECs with P. aeruginosa strains expressing ExoU triggered a robust oxidative stress compared to strains expressing other exoenzyme effectors. We also provide evidence that, intriguingly, ExoU PLA2 activity was detectable in mitochondria and mitochondria-associated membrane fractions isolated from P. aeruginosa-infected PMVECs. Interestingly, ExoU-mediated activation of caspase-1 was partially inhibited by reactive oxygen species scavengers. Together, these data suggest ExoU exerts pleiotropic effects on PMVEC function during P. aeruginosa infection that may inhibit endothelial barrier and inflammatory functions.
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