Abstract
Chronic exposure to environmental pollutants is a major contributor to the development and progression of obstructive airway diseases, including asthma and COPD. Understanding the mechanisms underlying the development of obstructive lung diseases upon exposure to inhaled pollutants will lead to novel insights into the pathogenesis, prevention and treatment of these diseases. The respiratory epithelial lining forms a robust physicochemical barrier protecting the body from inhaled toxic particles and pathogens. Inhalation of airborne particles and gases may impair airway epithelial barrier function and subsequently lead to exaggerated inflammatory responses and airway remodelling, which are key features of asthma and COPD. In addition, air pollutant-induced airway epithelial barrier dysfunction may increase susceptibility to respiratory infections, thereby increasing the risk of exacerbations and thus triggering further inflammation. In this review, we discuss the molecular and immunological mechanisms involved in physical barrier disruption induced by major airborne pollutants and outline their implications in the pathogenesis of asthma and COPD. We further discuss the link between these pollutants and changes in the lung microbiome as a potential factor for aggravating airway diseases. Understanding these mechanisms may lead to identification of novel targets for therapeutic intervention to restore airway epithelial integrity in asthma and COPD.
Abstract
Exposure to air pollution induces airway epithelial barrier dysfunction through several mechanisms including increased oxidative stress, exaggerated cytokine responses and impaired host defence, which contributes to development of asthma and COPD. https://bit.ly/3DHL1CA
Introduction
Obstructive airway diseases, including COPD and asthma, are respiratory diseases characterised by airflow limitation, chronic airway inflammation and progressive decline in lung function [1]. By 2015, more than half a billion individuals were diagnosed with asthma or COPD worldwide [2]. Although asthma cases account for up to two-thirds of these cases, the mortality rate in COPD is twice that of asthma, which is in part explained by the fact that COPD is mostly diagnosed among elderly patients [2]. Environmental exposures, including air pollutants from burning biomass and fossil fuels, dust, nanoparticles that are emitted by chemical industries, microplastics in textiles, emissions from large farms, and detergents used for laundry, expose a large population to health risks both in developed and developing countries [3]. These environmental factors in combination with genetic susceptibility factors constitute the major risk factors for chronic airway diseases [4]. In addition, such pollutants can worsen the symptoms and exacerbate asthma and COPD, as demonstrated by the observation that each year many patients are being admitted to hospital at times of reduced air quality during both extremely high and low temperature days [5–7]. These exposures may increase susceptibility to airway infections with viral and bacterial pathogens, which are considered to be the major driving factors for exacerbations [8]. The airway epithelium functions as a mechanical and immunologic barrier by its physical barrier function, removal of noxious agents by employing mucociliary machinery, metabolism of pollutants and production of antimicrobial and immune mediators, collectively serving to protect the gas exchange unit, i.e. the alveoli, as well as the submucosal layers from the inhaled environment [9]. Due to its anatomical location as the first point in the respiratory system encountering these exposures, it is more susceptible to damage than the alveoli. Indeed, there is increasing evidence to suggest that COPD cases that are linked to exposure to the emissions released by burning biomass fuels show a distinct phenotype with more prominent airway disease and less alveolar damage (emphysema) [10, 11]. Impaired airway epithelial barrier function is involved in the complex pathogenesis of both asthma and COPD, both of which are obstructive airway diseases [9, 12]. Many air pollutants inflict epithelial damage by inducing oxidative stress [13], propagating barrier dysfunction, pro-inflammatory responses and remodelling. Impaired epithelial repair mechanisms may lead to persistent barrier disruption [9]. Prolonged exposure to many of the inhaled air pollutants directly or indirectly causes airway epithelial barrier dysfunction [12], which may subsequently facilitate colonisation and invasion of respiratory pathogens, and thus may contribute to the development and progression of COPD and asthma.
In this review, we provide a comprehensive, up-to-date overview on the mechanisms of air pollutant-induced airway epithelial barrier dysfunction and outline how this contributes to airway epithelial remodelling, epithelial innate immune dysfunction and infections in asthma and COPD. Furthermore, by discussing potential therapeutics that have been experimentally found to resolve airway epithelial barrier dysfunction induced by air pollutants in different airway disease models, we aim to stress the clinical implications of this novel insight.
Sources, compositions and respiratory hazards of air pollutants
Air pollutants are generally categorised based on their nature (gas or particles), sources (indoor and outdoor) and size (ultrafine, fine and coarse) [14]. Air pollutants with either indoor or outdoor air origin are a mixture of gas and solid-phase varied-size particles but with different origins [14]. Indoor air pollution mainly originates from stoves, biologic materials (such as mould), microplastics and household dust [15], whereas outdoor pollutants originate from vehicles and industrial (urban)/agricultural activities (rural) [14]. Outdoor particulate matter (PM) is a heterogenous mixture that can consist of airborne dust and heavy metals as well as nanoparticles emitted by vehicles, wildfire smoke, volcano eruptions and chemical industries [16]. The majority of outdoor urban PM originates from incomplete burning of fossil fuels by transport vehicles in cities [17].
PM ranges from ultrafine particles with diameters ≤0.1 µm or PM0.1 (e.g. nanoparticles), fine particles or PM2.5 ≤2.5 µm (e.g. vehicle exhaust) and coarse particles or PM10–2.5 2.5–10 µm (e.g. dust) [16]. Fine PM is particularly harmful to inhale as it travels deeper into the small airways than coarse PM [16]. Indeed, inhalation of fine PM has been associated with the progression of asthma and COPD [18–20]. In addition to black carbon, PM2.5 carries chemical components such as sulfate, nitrate, ammonium and silicon, as well as gas phase polyaromatic hydrocarbon (PAH), mainly originating from either industrial sources such as chemical industries or burning of fossil fuels as well as emissions from large farms [14]. Apart from PAH, other gas phase pollutants such as ozone, sulphur dioxide (SO2), nitrogen oxides (NOx), carbon monoxide (CO) and methane appear separately from PM2.5 in ambient air pollution [14]. Ozone is formed as a by-product of a reaction between volatile organic compounds and NOx originated from outdoor air pollution in the presence of sunlight [17] and PAH originates from burning of organic materials such as oil, woods and coal [14].
The average concentrations of PM0.1, PM2.5, PM10–2.5 in outdoor air have been reported to be affected by season and have been calculated as 16–58, 27–58 and 20–42 µg·m−3, respectively [21, 22]. Recent World Health Organization (WHO) air quality guidelines recommend the daily levels of PM2.5 and PM10–2.5 in the air to be kept lower than 15 µg·m−3 and 45 µg·m−3, respectively [23]. A 10 µg·m−3 increase in PM2.5 and PM10–2.5 levels was associated with higher mortality and prevalence of respiratory diseases [24]. Furthermore, short- or long-term exposure to air pollutants is closely linked to respiratory diseases such as asthma and COPD [14]. Increased levels of outdoor pollution, in particular NO2, PM2.5 and black carbon levels, have also been associated with the onset and progression of childhood asthma [18]. Additionally, a recent large cross-sectional study revealed a strong association between increased levels of PM2.5 and NO2 and decreased lung function and prevalence of COPD [19]. Volcano ash released upon volcanic eruptions has been considered as an air pollutant with a potential hazardous impact on respiratory function [25]. Volcano ash is composed of many known air pollutants, including fine PM, iron, silica (SiO2) and SO2. It has been shown that volcanic emission exposure, specifically SO2, is associated with increased hospitalisation in patients with respiratory diseases, particularly in those with COPD and asthma [26].
Airway epithelial barrier function in health and obstructive lung diseases
The pseudostratified human airway epithelium is composed of several subsets of cells, including secretory goblet and club cells, ciliated cells, basal cells and more rare cell types such as tuft cells, neuroendocrine cells and recently identified ionocytes, each responsible for a specific function (figure 1a) [27]. Mucus produced by goblet cells trap and neutralise noxious particles that can subsequently be cleared by ciliary movement of the ciliated cells. Basal cells can regenerate these secretory subsets and ciliated cells [27]. Airway epithelial cells (AECs) protect the submucosal layer against noxious particles, allergens and respiratory pathogens, by forming both physical, mucosal and innate immune barriers [9]. The physical airway epithelial barriers include junctions between the adjacent cells. At the apical side of the cells, tight junctions (TJs) including zona occludens (ZO)-1, ZO-2, claudin family members, the junctional adhesion molecule (JAM) family, occludin, tricellulin and marvelD3, stabilise the barrier. At the basolateral side of TJs, adherens junctions (AJs), comprising the transmembrane protein E-cadherin, attach the cells to each other [12]. AJs and TJs are linked together via ZOs and the cell polarity proteins Par complex (Par1–6) [9] and to the cytoskeleton machinery through scaffolding proteins, e.g. actin filaments, cingulin and β-catenin [12]. TJs serve as ionic gates which chiefly regulate the passage of ions and small peptides between the epithelial cells, yet function as fences which compartmentalise apical and basal parts of the cell establishing cell polarity [12]. In contrast, AJs attach the adjacent AECs at the basolateral side, providing a robust attachment that facilitates the formation of other junctional complexes. Together AJs and TJs keep the sub-epithelium protected from penetration of noxious particles and respiratory pathogens [12]. Although both AJs and TJs are expressed by all subsets of AECs, specific subsets may be more susceptible to barrier dysfunction resulting from air pollutants. For instance, since ciliated cells are located on the luminal surfaces, and are in direct contact with the inhaled particles, they are likely to be more susceptible to damaging insults than basal cells [28].
Loss of epithelial cell–cell contact has been observed in several obstructive airway diseases, including asthma and COPD [9, 12, 29]. Of note, decreased expression of several TJs and AJs, including E-cadherin, β-catenin, occludin and ZO-1 in the airway epithelium of patients with asthma and patients with COPD was reported to be accompanied by diminished ciliary function [9, 12]. Airway epithelial damage and loss of barrier function may not only lead to increased antigen uptake and antigen-presenting immune cells such as dendritic cells, but also to increased pro-inflammatory activity of the epithelium, leading to secretion of danger-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs), cytokines and chemokines and recruitment of innate and adaptive immune cells (figure 1b) [9]. Further, loss of barrier function is accompanied by impaired antimicrobial activity [30]. Meanwhile, other changes in epithelial function are observed in obstructive lung diseases, such as mucociliary dysfunction with the loss of cilia, impaired ciliary beating and mucus hypersecretion contributing to airway obstruction [9].
Molecular mechanisms involved in air pollutant-induced airway epithelial barrier dysfunction
Mechanisms of physical barrier disruption by particulate matter
Numerous studies showed that air pollutants, as one of the major risk factors for development of asthma and COPD, induce airway epithelial barrier disruption [31–35]. PM2.5 present in e.g. traffic-related air pollution is among the most studied outdoor air pollutants affecting epithelial integrity [36]. In addition, atmospheric gases such as ozone, ammonia and SO2 have been shown to induce airway epithelial barrier dysfunction [33, 34, 37–39]. Studies show that repetitive short sub-toxic exposures to soluble PM2.5 induces airway epithelial barrier disruption by downregulation of TJs, E-cadherin, decline in transepithelial electrical resistance (TEER) and an increase in paracellular permeability in vitro [34, 35, 40]. Furthermore, diesel exhaust as one of the major sources of PM in cities was shown to decrease TEER and reduce the expression of ZO-1 and E-cadherin in AECs in vitro and in vivo [31, 32, 41]. An increase in reactive oxygen species (ROS) production following exposure to air pollutants may serve as a key mechanism in airway epithelial barrier dysfunction. This resulting increase in oxidative stress can originate either from direct free radical activity of components (e.g. metals in PM), from the activation of cellular ROS-generating systems such as nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) and dual oxidase, or by altering mitochondrial function [42]. Moreover, air pollutants can enhance ROS levels by suppressing lung antioxidant mechanisms. While oxidative stress responses usually lead to activation of the antioxidant machinery, such as superoxide dismutase (SOD), nuclear factor E2-related factor 2 (Nrf2) and antioxidant responsive element (ARE)-mediated transcriptional responses, PM reduced these mechanisms particularly at higher doses [43]. Furthermore, a decrease in SOD2 expression has been observed in the lungs of mice repeatedly exposed to high concentration of PM2.5 prior to a haze period [44]. In addition, polymorphisms in antioxidant enzyme genes (GSTM1, GSTP1, GSTT1 and NQO1) have been associated with higher susceptibility to lung function decline upon exposure to air pollutants, highlighting the role of redox imbalance in the development of respiratory disease upon exposure to air pollutants [45, 46].
In urban areas the fine and ultrafine PM organic carbon-derivative components such as PAH and quinones (e.g. benzene and naphthalene) are largely responsible for oxidative damage [47]. PM2.5 and PAH induces ROS via the aryl hydrocarbon receptor and subsequent cytochrome p450 activation [48]. However, inorganic materials in PM2.5 such as transition metals (iron, copper, silicon etc.) and nanoparticles as well as gas phase NOx and ozone display free radical activity and may thus increase the oxidative burden [47]. In contrast, coarse particles are mainly composed of transition metals, which have been described to induce oxidative stress in the lung [49], either via direct free radical activity [47] or via increased lipid peroxidation in the lung [50].
Co-exposure to PM10–2.5 and lipopolysaccharide attenuated E-cadherin and claudin1 in ALI-cultured AECs in vitro possibly via ROS-mediated activation of aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) and through mitochondrial cytochrome p450 activation [51]. ROS-mediated activation of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and downstream extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) signalling is one of the molecular mechanisms that has been implicated in airway epithelial barrier disruption by affecting both TJs and AJs [9]. While high E-cadherin expression limits EGFR activity, activation of EGFR leads to redistribution of E-cadherin and vice versa, by causing tyrosine phosphorylation of β-catenin through Src kinases [52], internalisation of E-cadherin and increased paracellular permeability by Rac1/c-jun N-terminal kinase (JNK)-mediated decrease in ZO-1 and occludin junctional localisation [53]. Of note, PM-induced EGFR activation in AECs was shown to induce airway epithelial barrier disruption in AECs [54, 55]. Non-toxic doses of whole PM2.5, and organic extract of PM2.5 mainly containing PAH, were shown to increase the release of the EGFR ligand amphiregulin over 24 h up to 48 h post-exposure in AECs in vitro [56, 57]. This increased release of EGFR ligands upon PM exposure was reported to be dependent on metalloproteinases such as metalloproteinase 17 (ADAM17) also known as (TNF-α)-converting enzyme (TACE) [58], which proteolytically cleaves the active form of amphiregulin. PM-induced ROS release has been implicated in the increase of amphiregulin release in AECs [55], which may subsequently lead to EGFR/ERK activation and airway epithelial barrier disruption by the destabilisation of junctional proteins. The activation of EGFR by PM was shown to lead to further release of amphiregulin in an ERK1-dependent manner [59]. Cytoplasmic release of high-mobility group box 1 (HMGB1), a chromatin-binding protein and DAMP released upon cellular damage, has also been shown to cause a disruption in TJs and AJs via activation of ERK in AECs in vitro [60]. Short-term (2 days) exposure to PM2.5 increases HMGB1 release in the airways of mice [61], which may subsequently lead to airway epithelial barrier disruption. The PM-mediated release of HMGB1 and subsequent ERK-induced barrier disruption may be dependent on ROS levels, as oxidative stress was reported to enhance the release of HMGB1 from epithelial cells in vitro [62]. Therefore, ROS may not only lead to EGFR activation, but may also induce the release of HMGB1 and thus increase ERK signalling, leading to disassembly of AJs and TJs (figure 1c).
The oxidative damage induced by air pollutants is thought to be mainly mediated through the mitochondria that are responsible for oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) and concomitant ROS production [63]. Mitochondria are also highly sensitive to oxidative stress damage, and mitochondrial damage leads to higher ROS production. It has been proposed that PAH present in PM triggers oxidative damage to mitochondria [64, 65]. Mitochondrial dysfunction has been reported in the airway epithelium upon environmental exposures [63]. Notably, transcriptomic analysis of AECs exposed to PM2.5 revealed a significant alteration in the expression of genes regulating metabolic functions [66]. A metabolic shift from OXPHOS to glycolysis has been observed in AECs stimulated with organic soluble fraction of PM2.5 for 24 h [67]. In line with these findings, repeated exposure of AECs from both patients with COPD and non-COPD subjects to PM2.5 for 24 h induced mitochondrial dysfunction with increased mitochondrial (mt) ROS levels and reduced OXPHOS activity [68]. Similar mitochondrial abnormalities with enhanced ROS production have been observed in the lung tissues of mice and rats that received PM2.5 intranasally for 1 month [69, 70] and PM10–2.5 for 3 weeks [71]. Increased levels of mtROS may contribute to airway epithelial barrier disruption through the activation of EGFR and ERK (figure 1c) [9, 70].
Air pollutant-induced mucociliary dysfunction in airway epithelium
Mucociliary clearance is mediated by the airway surface liquid (ASL) as well as ciliary function [72]. Both mucus and hydration of the ASL affect the airway epithelial layer, and both are impacted by cigarette smoke (CS) in patients with COPD [73], and possibly by air pollutants. Ciliary function is dependent on ciliary length, beat frequency and numbers of cilia, all of which are affected in COPD and asthma [74] as well as in response to air pollutants [75]. Diesel exhaust-derived PM has been shown to induce ciliary dysfunction by reducing ciliary beat in AECs from both healthy individuals and patients with asthma [76, 77]. Furthermore, while 24 h exposure with higher concentrations of PM2.5 (6 and 12 µg·mm−2) reduced ciliary beat in ALI-cultured nasal epithelial cells, 12 h exposure with lower concentrations of PM2.5 (1.5 µg·mm−2) promoted ciliary beating, suggesting involvement of an adaptive response in ciliary beat upon exposure to lower concentrations and shorter PM exposures [78]. Furthermore, genome-wide analysis of human AECs exposed to high doses of PM2.5 organic extract showed attenuation of cilia and enrichment of mucus marker genes, suggesting PM2.5-induced impairment of mucociliary clearance [79]. In line with this, loss of cilia has been observed in mice exposed to PM2.5 for 28 days [80]. Chronic exposure of rats to airborne PM for 7 months induced COPD-like phenotypes in the airways with an increase in mucin 5AC (MUC5AC) expression and mucus metaplasia [81]. MUC5AC expression is partly regulated by the EGFR pathway. Of note, low-dose PM2.5 was shown to increase MUC5AC expression in mice trachea and human AECs which was associated with an increase in the EGFR ligand amphiregulin [82]. This PM-induced increase in MUC5AC was further shown to be mediated by activation of the EGFR-PI3K-AKT axis in vitro [83]. Additionally, PM from wood smoke increase MUC5AC expression in AECs via activation of EGFR and downstream signalling p38/mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), glycogen synthase kinase 3β (GSK3β) and β-catenin [84]. Activation of MAPK and ERK was also associated with PM-induced increase in the expression of MUC5B and MUC5AC in AEC [85, 86]. Oxidative stress may contribute to this mucus hypersecretion in AECs, as ROS-mediated activation of ERK1/2 aggravates MUC5A overexpression in AECs exposed to PM [87]. Nevertheless, mucus hypersecretion could be transiently beneficial in acute exposures, since it efficiently traps PM and impedes its transportation to the epithelium as evidenced by attenuation in ROS in differentiated AECs exposed to iron-rich PM from an underground railway [88]. In line, it was shown that MUC5AC expression was unaffected by acute exposure of AECs to PM; instead, the accumulation of mucus-containing vesicles within the cytoplasm of goblet cells was associated with PM exposure [89]. Therefore, chronic exposure to air pollutants may more pathologically contribute to airway obstruction by inducing ciliary destruction and a shift to hypersecretory phenotype in the epithelium.
Dysregulation of non-coding RNAs: a potential mechanism for air pollutant-induced airway epithelial barrier disruption
Non-coding RNAs, including microRNAs (miRs) and long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs), are single-stranded RNA sequences regulating many homeostatic processes in the lung such as cellular differentiation, remodelling, host defence and mucociliary function by post-transcriptional modifications of mRNAs [90, 91]. Differentially-regulated miRs have been observed in airway diseases and linked to the pathogenesis of asthma and COPD [92]. More importantly, several miRs, such as miR34c, miR145, miR146a, miR155, miR223 and miR4516, were reported to regulate epithelial barrier function in intestinal and airway epithelium [93–98]. For instance, TGFβ-mediated increase in expression of miR-145, which is also highly expressed in the airway epithelium of patients with asthma and patients with COPD [92, 99], was shown to reduce E-cadherin, β-catenin and claudin-1 gene expression in airway epithelium in mice [98]. Ambient PM is also shown to disturb miRs and lncRNAs regulation in AECs, leading to dysregulated expression of miR-29–3 bp, miR-375 and metastasis-associated lung adenocarcinoma transcript 1 (MALTA1) [100–102]. Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are a group of membrane-derived cellular cargo transporters promoting paracrine signalling during homeostasis and diseases by regulating apoptosis and innate immune responses to foreign particles and pathogens including by transferring miRs [103, 104]. It was shown that ambient PM increases the release of thiol-dependent EVs in AECs in vitro [105]. This may alter EV properties, for example, by modifying miR profiles, as it has been observed in CS-stimulated AECs [106, 107]. In addition to miRs, specific lncRNAs have been demonstrated to affect airway epithelial barrier dysfunction, including MALTA1. Notably, ambient PM2.5 was shown to reduce E-cadherin gene expression in AEC in vitro, in which an NF-κB-mediated increase in MALTA1 expression was proposed to be involved [100, 108]. Moreover, PM2.5 may induce airway epithelial barrier disruption via another lncRNA, maternally expressed gene 3 (MEG3). Higher expression of MEG3 has been observed in the lungs of patients with COPD and this was associated to disease severity [109]. Both PM2.5 and CS induce apoptosis and autophagy in AECs via a similar mechanism through MEG3 [109, 110], which may lead to loss of airway barrier integrity. In addition, MEG3 overexpression has been shown to induce barrier disruption in AECs by decreasing E-cadherin gene expression, leading to inhibition of basal cell differentiation to club, goblet and ciliated cells [111]. In summary, these observations show that non-coding RNAs may mediate various of the effects of air pollution on airway epithelial barrier function.
Mechanisms underlying barrier disruptive effects of airborne nanoparticles
The extensive use of nanotechnology has caused a massive increase in engineered nanoparticle production, which has led to increased atmospheric levels of these particles [112]. Evidence suggests that a broad range of physicochemical properties of engineered nanoparticles can influence lung epithelial cell responses and barrier integrity [113]. Long-term inhalation of atmospheric nanoparticles, such as carbon nanotubes, copper oxide (CuO), titanium dioxide (TiO2) and silver nanoparticles, potentially causes airway injuries which my lead to the development of asthma and COPD [114]. Of note, CuO nanoparticles that have diverse applications in industrial products were shown to increase mucus secretion via MAPK-mediated increase in MUC5AC expression both in healthy donor-derived AECs and in a murine asthmatic model, suggesting a potential contribution of CuO to the pathogenesis of asthma [115, 116]. TiO2 nanoparticles are the most abundantly produced nanomaterial in commercial products [117, 118]. These particles have been shown to induce dose-dependent inflammation and injury of the lower airways [96, 119]. A recent study showed that TiO2 nanoparticles also disrupt airway epithelial barrier structure and function through oxidative stress-mediated loss of TJs and AJs as well as inducing inflammation and enhanced multiple pro-inflammatory cytokines in vitro and in vivo [120]. Furthermore, TiO2 induces mucociliary dysfunction in AECs through mucus hypersecretion via MAPK-mediated increase in expression of MUC5B [121]. In vitro studies have shown that SiO2 nanoparticles disrupt TJs through ROS-mediated activation of ERK [122] and impair ciliary beat activity through inhibition of a calcium-permeable channel in AECs [123]. Aerosolised graphene oxide, an emerging nanomaterial, also impairs airway epithelial barrier function as 1-month exposed ALI-cultured AECs showed reduced TEER levels, which were likely to be mediated through blockage of autophagy and lysosomal-mediated alteration in trans-cellular ions flux (figure 1c) [124]. These studies put forth the notion that nanoparticles not only contribute to the development of airway diseases but may also aggravate pre-existing airway diseases by provoking airway barrier disruption.
It should be noted that many in vitro studies used high deposited PM doses on a surface by exposing submerged cultures to concentrated PM [31, 34, 35, 125]. These studies have mimicked PM exposure by using concentrations that reflect exposure accumulated over multiple years in a short exposure model. Therefore, the impact of lower concentrations of PM in a longer exposure time should be considered in future experimental studies.
Immune-mediated alterations in airway epithelial barrier function upon exposure to air pollutants
Air pollutant-induced airway barrier dysfunction may lead to altered immune responses and increased susceptibility to infection, and thus plays a major role in the pathogenesis of asthma and COPD. Immune mediators including cytokines, chemokine and proteases produced by innate immune cells, including AECs, may contribute to airway epithelial barrier disruption. As such, air pollutants may not only directly induce disruption of cell–cell contacts, but may also lead to barrier disruption by stimulating release of these immune mediators (table 1). In particular, long-term exposures to these factors may induce exaggerated pro-inflammatory responses, which may compromise cell contacts. Notably, chronic exposure of rats to PM from biomass fuels induced an inflammatory phenotype with increased neutrophils in the bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL), which was accompanied with airway epithelial barrier disruption [81]. Accumulation of neutrophils in the airway submucosa can lead to epithelial barrier disruption by the release of neutrophil-derived cytokine oncostatin M and serine proteases, which were shown to disrupt cell–cell contacts in the AECs [140, 141]. PM2.5 induces an increase in interleukin (IL)-1β levels through mtROS-mediated NLRP3 inflammasome activation in lung tissue and BAL of mice, which may also trigger airway barrier disruption [142]. IL-1 family members, including IL-1β and IL-33, directly or indirectly regulate airway barrier function [9] and are upregulated in AECs in response to air pollutants [39, 134, 143]. IL-1β induces ADAM17-mediated activation of human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) through increased release of neuregulin (NRG1), leading to airway barrier dysfunction as demonstrated by a reduction in TEER and a decrease in claudin18 in vitro [131, 132]. Activation of HER2 has also been shown to induce disassembly of AJs by phosphorylating β-catenin leading to segregation from E-cadherin in AECs [133]. The inflammasome is known to subsequently cleave IL-1β into its active form. Inhibition of the NLRP3 inflammasome, NRG1 and HER2 kinase was shown to prevent IL-1β-induced airway epithelial permeability [144]. Higher inflammasome activity has been observed in patients with asthma and patients with COPD [145, 146], and the air pollutants ozone, PM2.5 and PM10–2.5 have been shown to induce inflammasome activation in the airways in vitro and in vivo [71, 147, 148].
Moreover, IL-1β and IL-17A augment mucus production by activation of NF-κB subunit p65, leading to hypersecretion of MUC5B and MUC5AC [127, 128], which together with air pollutant-induced ciliary dysfunction may aggravate airway obstruction. By contrast, several cytokines were shown to induce epithelial barrier protective effects and yet their release was increased upon exposure to air pollutants. IL-33 is such a cytokine that was shown to be released upon exposure to ozone, diesel exhaust and PM10–2.5 [39, 149] and to exert airway epithelial barrier protective effects in ozone-induced lung injury model in vivo by restoring expression of E-cadherin, ZO-1 and claudin-4 proteins possibly via regulating neutrophil recruitment [39].
Activation of adaptive immune system may contribute to airway epithelial barrier dysfunction. T-helper cytokines that play a key role in pathogenesis of asthma and COPD, such as those produced by T-helper (Th)1, Th2 and Th17 cells, have been shown to contribute to epithelial damage [9, 150]. Exposure to air pollutants has been shown to activate these adaptive immune responses and increase release of their mediators, including pro-inflammatory cytokines such as IFN-γ, TNF-α, IL-13, IL-17A and IL-22 (figure 1b) [81, 129, 149, 151]. The receptors of these cytokines are expressed by AECs and all of these cytokines have been reported to induce airway epithelial barrier disruption upon CS exposure [9]. For instance, the expression of Th1-type cytokines IFN-γ and TNF-α was induced by air pollutants in airways of rats [81], and both cytokines have been shown to disrupt TJs in AECs in vitro through EGFR-mediated activation of ERK [126]. Air pollutant-induced Th17 cytokines IL-17A and IL-17F may also disrupt airway barrier function [9]. PM exposure induced an upregulation in IL-17A in AECs in vitro [129]. IL-17A upregulation was shown to suppress E-cadherin expression in AEC in vitro [130]. PM2.5-induced elevation of IL-17A in AECs has also been shown to promote mitochondrial dysfunction, which may lead to increased mtROS levels and further reduction in cell integrity [130]. Furthermore, IL-22 as a key effector in Th17 differentiation was also shown to contribute to airway barrier dysfunction by reducing E-cadherin in AECs from patients with severe asthma [152]. IL-22 levels increased in the airways of both patients with severe asthma and severe COPD [152, 153]. The barrier disruptive action of IL-22 only occurs with TGF-β co-stimulation [152], suggesting the additive action of IL-22 on TGF-β, as exogenous IL-22 increases TGF-β expression in the lungs of mice [154]. Interestingly, IL-22-gene deleted mice had improved barrier function with decreased IFN-γ in BAL [155], further suggesting that complex interaction with other cytokines may choose the effect on barrier function. Mice exposed to urban PM for 4 days also showed a AhR-dependent increase in IL-22 in their lungs, which may affect barrier function [156]. Th2-driven responses as a dominant phenotype in allergic asthma have also been linked to dysregulated airway barrier function [150]. This Th2 phenotype is also observed upon exposure to air pollutants as observed by an increase in Th2 cytokines IL-4 and IL-13 upon PM exposure [149, 151]. Notably, mice that chronically inhaled PM2.5 showed disrupted sinonasal epithelial barriers as demonstrated by a decrease in E-cadherin and claudin-1 expression, which was accompanied with an increase in IL-13 in the sinonasal epithelium [143]. IL-13 and IL-4 were shown to disrupt airway epithelial barriers in vitro through the Janus-associated kinase [157]. Together, dysregulated pro-inflammatory and immune responses upon long-term exposure to air pollutants may exacerbate airway epithelial barrier dysfunction in patients with asthma and COPD.
Air pollutant-induced airway epithelial dysfunction and susceptibility to microbial infection
Dysregulated innate immune responses and susceptibility to respiratory infections
Disrupted airway epithelium with impaired innate immune responses as a consequence of exposure to air pollutants may increase the risk of airway infections by facilitating respiratory pathogens to invade the epithelium [9, 158]. ROS-mediated epithelial barrier disruption induced by air pollutants may directly enhance pathogen entrance through a more permeable epithelium. Indeed, it was shown that PM exposure increases internalisation and colonisation of Pseudomonas aeruginosa in airway epithelium, which was associated with ROS-mediated disassembly of TJs [159]. In addition to increasing bacterial internalisation through disruption of barrier function, air pollution impairs airway epithelial antimicrobial responses to respiratory pathogens leading to decreased clearance of pathogens and disease exacerbation (table 1). Airway epithelial-derived host defence peptides (HDPs) are a group of antimicrobial agents released into the extracellular space in response to pathogens [30]. Altered secretion of certain HDPs such as β-defensins has been observed in patients with asthma and patients with COPD as well as in response to noxious particles and was associated with pathogenesis of the diseases [135, 160–162]. Whole diesel exhaust was shown to downregulate host defence peptide β-defensin-2 in AECs from patients with COPD stimulated with Haemophilus influenzae [136]. In line with these observations, PM was shown to decrease airway epithelial HDPs and in particular β-defensin1/2 and stimulate P. aeruginosa growth in vitro and in vivo [163], which was reported to be mediated by ROS [158]. More clinically relevant, a study revealed that children exposed to PM2.5 in a polluted area had decreased airway epithelial-derived salivary agglutinin, an antimicrobial glycoprotein, suggesting that PM-exposed individuals may potentially be more vulnerable to respiratory infections. PM also reduces P. aeruginosa clearance in the airway epithelium by altering HDPs and impairing mucociliary function via thyroid transcription factor 1 which regulates club cell-derived HDPs [164]. In line, PM was shown to enhance respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection in mice by attenuating club cell-derived secretory proteins (CCs) [137]. This air pollutant-induced impairment in HDPs may lead to increased inflammatory responses to pathogens as observed in the airway epithelium of patients with asthma exposed to PM and RSV [165]. Additionally, PM upregulates host cell surface proteins that can be hijacked by respiratory pathogens to colonise and enter the epithelial cells. Indeed, it was shown that PM10–2.5 increases attachment of Streptococcus pneumoniae to the airway epithelium via an increase in platelet-activating factor receptor in vitro, thereby promoting airway infection [166]. Furthermore, nitrogen dioxide as a gas component of ambient air pollution increases airway epithelial expression of intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM1) [167], which is exploited by major pathogens involved in COPD exacerbation, i.e. rhinovirus and non-typeable H. influenzae, to attach to AECs [168, 169]. Interestingly, high expression of ICAM1 was notable in the goblet cells of patients with airway complications [170], suggesting a potential link between air pollutant-induced increase in pathogen attachment and mucus overproduction in COPD exacerbation. The air pollutant-induced susceptibility to respiratory pathogens upon exposure to air pollutants may either be caused by or lead to altered composition of microbiota in the airways.
Air pollutant-induced dysbiosis in lung microbiome
Over the past decade, the involvement of the lung microbiome in the maintenance of respiratory health and the development and progression of respiratory disease has gained an increasing amount of attention. The core constituents of the healthy human lung microbiome are the phyla Bacteroidetes and Firmicutes, with Prevotella (Bacteroidetes), Streptococcus and Veillonella (Firmicutes) as the most abundant genera (figure 2a) [171]. The lung microbiome composition can be influenced by environmental and lifestyle factors. In contrast to the gut, where decreased microbial richness has been associated with disease, in the lung increased diversity has been associated with disease, including asthma [172]. Moreover, alterations in the composition of the bacterial constituents in the lung has been observed in different lung disease states including, but not limited to, asthma, COPD, cystic fibrosis, respiratory infections and pulmonary fibrosis [173]. Of note, overrepresentation of Proteobacteria and Firmicutes has been reported in the lung of both asthma and COPD patients [9, 174]. Understanding the influence of airborne toxicants on lung microbiome composition is an area of ongoing research. However, to date there are only few descriptive studies which provide the first insights in this field. Exposure of experimental animals to high doses of PM2.5 via intratracheal instillation was shown to increase diversity and richness of the lung microbiome when compared with medium dose-treated controls [175, 176]. Specifically, in rats, Proteobacteria were decreased following PM2.5 exposure, whereas Bacteroidetes, Cyanobacteria and Firmicutes increased significantly with increasing PM2.5 concentrations [176]. Normal lung microbiome in mice and rats predominantly include Proteobacteria following with other phyla such as Actinobacteria, Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes in rat and Bacteroidetes, Cyanobacteria and Firmicutes in mice [175, 176]. In contrast, chronic exposure of mice to lower doses of concentrated PM2.5 was shown to decrease richness and diversity of the lung microbiome compared with that in mice who were exposed to filtered-air [177]. In humans, short-term exposure to ozone led to a decreased airway epithelial barrier function as observed by an elevation in serum CC16 and an altered composition of nasal flora with a decrease in abundance of Firmicutes and Actinobacteria [138]. In line, short-term exposure to both PM2.5 and PM10–2.5 was negatively associated with abundance of Firmicutes, Actinobacteria and Proteobacteria in human nasal passage [178]. Moreover, children living in polluted areas had higher microbial diversity in the sputum than those living in less-polluted areas (figure 2b) [179]. The PM2.5-induced changes in the sputum microbiome has been linked to a decline in respiratory function, and these changes lasted for at least 14 days following exposure [180]. In addition, PM2.5 has been suggested to increase the risk of developing respiratory infections [181], and thus may lead to alterations in the lung microbiome and promote acute exacerbations of asthma and COPD, which are often associated with microbial infections. Intriguingly, there is evidence suggesting that PM2.5 can carry both airborne bacteria and bacteria-derived components to the lung [182]. However, whether this directly contributes to changes in the lung microbiome and the development of respiratory infections or exacerbations of chronic lung diseases warrants further research. A shift in microbiota towards Proteobacteria and Firmicutes including S. pneumoniae, H. influenzae and P. aeruginosa has been observed in the sputum of patients undergoing COPD exacerbations. Several of these pathogens have been reported to induce an increase in the permeability of AECs [9]. In addition to outdoor pollutants such as PM, household air pollution in Malawi was linked to alterations in the lung microbiome, with elevated proportions of Neisseria and Streptococcus in the lung [183], although bacterial diversity and relative abundance at the phyla level were not significantly different. Overall, the air pollutant-induced airway dysbiosis may provide a therapeutic insight into controlling airway epithelial barrier dysfunction in asthma and COPD.
Therapeutic strategies for restoration of airway epithelial barrier function in air pollutant-induced asthma and COPD
Due to the complex pathogenesis of airway diseases involving a plethora of factors, single therapy may not be as effective as combinational therapy. Although combinational therapy with inhalational corticosteroid (ICS) and long-acting bronchodilators (LABA/LAMA) is routinely prescribed to asthmatics and patients with COPD to control airway obstruction and inflammation, its potential to reverse barrier disruption induced by air pollutants is not evident. Budesonide, as a FDA-approved corticosteroid frequently used in asthma and COPD to suppress inflammation, failed to show any effect on PM2.5-induced barrier dysfunction in ALI-cultured AECs [35]. Moreover, tiotropium, a widely used LAMA, was unable to reduce excessive ROS produced in response to PM in an ovalbumin-induced mouse model of asthma [184], suggesting that it may not be effective on ROS-mediated barrier dysfunction. Therefore, considering supplementary therapeutics aimed at restoring airway epithelial barrier function may counteract mucosal and submucosal damage induced by air pollutants and as such may improve lung function in patients with progressive airway diseases. This barrier protective strategy can be triggered by inhibiting excessive oxidative burden, reducing autophagy and suppressing pathways involved in hyper-inflammatory response. Of note, eliminating PM-induced excessive ROS in nasal epithelial cells of mice by ROS scavengers including N-acetyl-cysteine (NAC) has been described to restore TJ assembly in vivo [32]. In line with this, pre-treatment of nasal epithelial cells with NAC exerted similar protective effects on TJs in response to PM2.5 in vitro [159, 185]. Interestingly, treatment with an antioxidant was effective in inhibition of AhR activation as the upstream regulator of ROS production in AECs in response to air pollutants [48], which may thus also restore defects in epithelial barrier function. Furthermore, it may suppress pro-inflammatory signals leading to barrier dysfunction, as excess ROS activates NF-κB signalling by phosphorylating the IκB subunit and increasing translocation to the nucleus, which may trigger further barrier dysfunction by inducing pro-inflammatory cytokine release [186]. Treatment with NAC also reduced PM-induced increase in ROS in AECs in vitro, which subsequently inhibited IκB phosphorylation and release of pro-inflammatory cytokines [186]. Furthermore, oral pre-treatment of mice with the macrolide Azithromycin was shown to reduce airway barrier dysfunction induced by short-term inhalation of SO2 by suppressing inflammatory responses [38]. Inhibition of autophagy and ROS production by an antioxidant resveratrol may be an additional effective strategy to simultaneously overcome PM-induced cell junction disruption and mucus overproduction in AECs [125]. Resveratrol as an antioxidant and sirtuin 1 activator restored airway epithelial integrity via targeting mitochondrial function and reducing ROS, thus it may be similarly effective against air pollutant-induced airway epithelial damage [187, 188]. Furthermore, co-inhalation of hydrogen gas as an antioxidant, which has already been shown to improve lung function in a CS-induced rat model of COPD [189], was shown to reduce MUC5AC expression and oxidative damage in the airways of rats exposed to PM2.5 via amelioration of AhR-Nrf2 [190]. Lower levels of dietary antioxidants such as α-tocopherol have been observed in the airways of individuals exposed to air pollution [191], while their intake has been shown to suppress the air pollution-induced decline in lung function in patients with asthma [191, 192]. This suggests that receiving sufficient antioxidants in the diet may help to prevent respiratory disease in patients living in polluted areas, although controlled dietary intervention studies are needed to further support this conclusion. In addition to antioxidants, vitamin D3 (VitD3) supplementation may also restore airway epithelial barrier function by upregulating the expression of TJ proteins and in a broader sense by stimulating epithelial HDPs production [193]. Low levels of VitD3 observed in the serum of infants and women have been associated with high levels of air pollution [194, 195], making it a potential target for therapy. Of note, 1 day pre-treatment with VitD3 diminished PM2.5-induced increase in ROS and activation of NF-κB in AECs [196], which may lead to reduction in ROS-mediated barrier damage. Furthermore, VitD3 supplementation suppressed TGFβ-induced decrease in E-cadherin in AECs and inhibited epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) [197]. In addition, transcriptomic analysis of AECs exposed to PM revealed that VitD3 reduces PM-induced increase in claudin7 expression as a TJ component that known to promote EMT in intestinal epithelial cells [198, 199], suggesting a protective role for VitD3 against EMT. Together, employing these therapeutic strategies along with conventional ICS and LABA/LAMA may reduce the mucosal damage and improve lung function in the patients with asthma and COPD, particularly for those who reside in highly polluted areas.
Conclusion
Inhalation of PM and noxious gases that are emitted into the air in cities on a daily basis is a risk factor for the development of asthma and COPD. Current knowledge on the pathogenesis of these lung diseases confirms the negative impacts of air pollutants on lung function in patients with airway diseases. Airway epithelial barrier disruption is one of the central features of asthma and COPD, and air pollution is considered to be a major trigger for its development. We have summarised the key mechanisms regulating airway epithelial barrier disruption upon exposure to various air pollutants, of which ROS-mediated mechanisms appear to be the common mechanism. Airway epithelial barrier dysfunction induced by air pollutants perpetuates inflammation and airway remodelling and increases susceptibility to infections which may explain the higher rate of exacerbations observed in the patients with asthma and patients with COPD living in polluted areas. As high levels of urban gas phase air pollutants were shown to be particularly associated with occurrence of COPD exacerbations [200], it is essential to widely scrutinise the impacts of these pollutants on airway epithelial barriers. Although changes in the lung microbiome induced by air pollutants may facilitate airway infection and as such exacerbations, the direct link with barrier dysfunction is unknown and requires further investigations. Furthermore, due to the role of viral and fungal pathogens in airway epithelial barrier dysfunction, it is relevant to investigate the impact of air pollutants on the lung virome and mycobiome and to delineate how putative changes may contribute to barrier dysfunction. Restoring barrier function by therapeutic compounds, particularly those suppressing excessive ROS production by AECs, such as resveratrol and for instance VitD3 in combination with the routine ICS/LABA/LAMA medications, may be an effective strategy to prevent development of new cases as well as exacerbations in current patients with asthma and patients with COPD residing in polluted areas.
Footnotes
Provenance: Submitted article, peer reviewed.
Conflict of interest: M. Aghapour reports personal fees from Kommission zur Förderung des wissenschaftlichen Nachwuchses, Medical Faculty, Otto-von-Guericke University, Magdeburg, non-financial support from German Research Foundation, funded by grant 361210922/RTG 2408, outside the submitted work.
Conflict of interest: N.D. Ubags has nothing to disclose.
Conflict of interest: D. Bruder reports grants from German Research Foundation, grant number 361210922/RTG 2408, outside the submitted work.
Conflict of interest: P.S. Hiemstra reports grants from Boehringer Ingelheim, outside the submitted work.
Conflict of interest: V. Sidhaye has nothing to disclose.
Conflict of interest: F. Rezaee has nothing to disclose.
Conflict of interest: I.H. Heijink has nothing to disclose.
- Received May 10, 2021.
- Accepted November 13, 2021.
- Copyright ©The authors 2022
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