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1Department of Medicine, Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, and
2Cystic Fibrosis/Pulmonary Research and Treatment Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA.
Abstract
Adenosine is a ubiquitous biological mediator with the capacity to produce both pro- and anti-inflammatory effects in tissues. Proinflammatory and bronchoconstrictive actions of adenosine in the asthmatic lung are well recognized, with the latter being mediated, in part, through A1 receptor activation on airway smooth muscle. In this issue of the JCI, Sun et al. report findings in adenosine deaminase–deficient mice that suggest the occurrence of anti-inflammatory actions of adenosine in the lung, mediated through A1 adenosine receptors on macrophages. Here we discuss the history of the study of adenosine receptor ligands for asthma and how enhanced understanding of adenosine receptor biology may aid in the rational exploitation of these receptors as therapeutic targets.
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A startling rise in asthma prevalence has occurred over the past 2 decades, making it one of the most common chronic diseases of industrialized countries. Most morbidity and all mortality from asthma is the result of acute exacerbations (commonly known as asthma attacks), and treatment of these exacerbations accounts for the majority of the economic burden attributable to this disease. As research efforts have been expanded to further elucidate disease pathogenesis, vast arrays of inflammatory mediators and proinflammatory pathways have been discovered, and pharmacological interruption of many of these pathways has been proposed. However, the challenge to medical scientists and the pharmaceutical industry is in determining which of a growing list of candidates warrants investment of the time and resources required for transition from the bench to the bedside.
The endogenous purine nucleoside adenosine is one proinflammatory mediator that has garnered interest as a contributor to asthma pathogenesis, particularly with regard to acute exacerbations of the disease. ATP, released by cells, is rapidly metabolized by extracellular nucleotidases to adenosine, a potent signaling molecule that can activate several cell surface receptors to produce myriad effects on both parenchymal and immune cells throughout the body (Figure 1). As growing lines of evidence have supported a proinflammatory role for adenosine in the asthmatic lung, interest in adenosine receptor antagonists has risen.
Figure 1
Extracellular adenosine is produced predominantly by the metabolism of ATP released from cells. ATP is sequentially dephosphorylated by a series of membrane-bound and soluble ectonucleotidases to produce adenosine. Adenosine can act at 4 different 7-transmembrane, G-protein–coupled receptors present on the surfaces of both infiltrating leukocytes and resident parenchymal cells. While both proinflammatory and anti-inflammatory signals can be sent depending on the specific adenosine receptor activated, adenosine produces a net proinflammatory effect in the asthmatic airway. ADA is the primary catabolic enzyme for adenosine, and its absence in ADA-deficient mice results in marked elevations of extracellular adenosine. Elevations of extracellular adenosine are present in the asthmatic lung due to both increased release of ATP from cells and inhibition of ADA by local hypoxia. E-NPPs, ectonucleotide pyrophosphatase/phospho-diesterases; AP, alkaline phosphatase; NTPDases, ectonucleoside triphosphate-diphosphohydrolases.
Nonselective adenosine receptor antagonism
Evidence for efficacy of adenosine receptor antagonism may date back to the Victorian era, when physicians noted the beneficial effects of strong black coffee in patients with bronchial asthma. Coffee beans and tea leaves contain the plant alkaloid caffeine, a compound later recognized as an antagonist of adenosine receptors (1). A structurally similar methylated xanthine, theophylline, was developed into one of the first effective therapies for asthma in the 1940s and today remains the most widely prescribed drug for the treatment of airway disease worldwide (2), albeit with decreasing frequency in the US and Europe due to the advent of long-acting ? agonists and inhaled steroids.
Theophylline can act as both a bronchodilator and immunomodulator, depending on the serum concentration achieved. At higher doses (serum levels of 10–20 mg/l), bronchodilation is believed to occur through phosphodiesterase (PDE) inhibition. However, at lower doses (serum levels 5–10 mg/l), which have been shown to be anti-inflammatory, PDE is not significantly inhibited. Several mechanisms have been proposed for the anti-inflammatory effects of low-dose theophylline, including the antagonism of adenosine receptors, which occurs at concentrations 20- to 100-fold lower than that required for PDE inhibition (3).
Receptors for adenosine
Adenosine acts through 4 distinct cell surface receptors, each with varying ligand affinities, tissue distributions, and signal transduction mechanisms (Table 1). Thus, both proinflammatory and anti-inflammatory signals can be transmitted to cells by adenosine, depending on which adenosine receptors are present and activated (Figure 2). Theophylline is a nonselective adenosine receptor antagonist that may block both pro- and anti-inflammatory actions of adenosine, potentially decreasing its efficacy. Selective antagonists of adenosine receptors mediating a pure proinflammatory signal — or conversely, agonists of receptors transmitting a pure anti-inflammatory signal — conceivably may be more potent than nonselective ligands such as theophylline.
Table 1
Signal transduction pathways of adenosine receptors
Figure 2
Model of receptors and cell types mediating the pro- and anti-inflammatory effects of adenosine in the lung. Proinflammatory pathways are depicted in red while anti-inflammatory pathways are depicted in blue. A3 receptor activation has been implicated in a number of proinflammatory events including mast cell–dependent increases in vasopermeability, adenosine-induced mast cell degranulation, enhancement of antigen-induced mast cell degranulation, mucus metaplasia and secretion, and recruitment of eosinophils and neutrophils to the airway. It remains unclear whether this chemotactic effect of adenosine on granulocytes is due to direct activation of A3 receptors on these leukocytes or indirect activation through A3-induced mediator release by other cell types, such as mast cells. A2B receptors have also been implicated in mediating mast cell activation by adenosine. IL-13 and adenosine have been shown to stimulate one another in an amplification pathway that may contribute to the proinflammatory capacity of each mediator. Macrophages play an important anti-inflammatory role in asthma, and adenosine sends anti-inflammatory signals to macrophages through A1 and A3 receptors. These effects may occur through both the enhanced release of anti-inflammatory mediators, such as IL-10 and PGE2, and the inhibition of release of proinflammatory mediators, including TNF- and MMPs. Adenosine elicits bronchoconstriction in the asthmatic airway both directly from the activation of A1 receptors on airway smooth muscle and indirectly by bronchoconstrictive substances released by mast cells. A2A receptors are believed to send anti-inflammatory signals to all cell types on which they are expressed. Events depicted in the interstitium may also occur in the airway lumen.
The task of fully defining the effects of each adenosine receptor in an adenosine-rich environment, such as that present during an exacerbation of asthma (4), has been challenging in the past due to poor selectivity of adenosine receptor ligands, the expression of multiple receptor subtypes by both immune and parenchymal cells, and the difficulty establishing a model with chronic elevations of adenosine in the lung. Recently, mice deficient in adenosine deaminase (ADA), the primary catabolic enzyme for adenosine, have been generated. These animals have marked elevations of lung adenosine and die from respiratory failure at 18–21 days of age (5). Examination of these animals at the time of death has revealed several features similar to human asthma, including eosinophilic lung inflammation, goblet cell hyperplasia, mast cell degranulation, elevation of the Th2 cytokine IL-13, elevation of IgE, and airway hyperresponsiveness. ADA-deficient mice have been used in conjunction with more selective adenosine receptor ligands and through intercrosses with mice lacking specific adenosine receptors to begin to define the role of each individual receptor in the presence of sustained elevations in lung adenosine. Many of the inflammatory changes observed in the lungs of ADA-deficient mice were attenuated when these animals were treated with a selective A3 receptor antagonist or intercrossed with A3-deficient mice, which suggests a proinflammatory role for the A3 adenosine receptor under conditions of marked elevations of lung adenosine (6) (Figure 2).
Anti-inflammatory actions of A1 adenosine receptor activation
In this issue of the JCI, Sun et al. report that mice deficient in both ADA and the A1 adenosine receptor die at days 15–16 from an inflammatory lung disease that is more severe than that of age-matched littermates deficient only in ADA (7). In addition to enhanced eosinophilic lung inflammation, the authors observed exaggerated expression of Th2 cytokines and chemokines, increased mucus metaplasia, and increased expression of MMPs in animals lacking both the catabolic enzyme and the A1 receptor. These findings suggest an anti-inflammatory role for chronic A1 receptor activation by high levels of adenosine in the lung, a surprising and important finding in light of the fact that A1 receptor antagonists are being investigated as a potential treatment for asthma.
In ADA-deficient mice, A1 expression is increased 3-fold in whole-lung RNA extracts and 50-fold in RNA isolated from bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) cell pellets. Cell pellets from these animals contain predominantly macrophages (200-fold more macrophages than all other cells combined), suggesting that this cell is the predominant cell type expressing A1 in this model. Indeed, in situ hybridization with an A1-specific probe localized expression to macrophages in the lungs of ADA-deficient mice. Thus, the anti-inflammatory effects of adenosine via A1 are likely the result of activation of this receptor on macrophages.
Adenosine-mediated anti-inflammatory effects have been studied extensively in macrophages and macrophage cell lines. Adenosine inhibits the production of several proinflammatory cytokines (TNF-, IL-6, and IL-8) by LPS-stimulated macrophages and enhances the release of the anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10 (8-10). Despite these well-established anti-inflammatory effects of adenosine on the macrophage, the adenosine receptor(s) mediating these actions have been difficult to delineate due to incomplete selectivity of adenosine receptor ligands. While newer, increasingly selective compounds have been developed recently, there is a paucity of published data regarding their impact on macrophage function.
A similar anti-inflammatory role for the A1 receptor on macrophages has been reported in studies with A1-deficient mice in an experimental model of allergic encephalomyelitis (11). In this model, myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein–driven (MOG-driven) activation of macrophages in the CNS results in demyelination and axonal injury, producing an animal model of multiple sclerosis in WT mice. In addition to a worsened physiological and histopathological phenotype observed in A1-deficient mice exposed to MOG, macrophages isolated from these animals showed increased expression of the proinflammatory genes IL-1? and MMP-12 when compared to expression of these genes in macrophages from similarly exposed WT mice (11). Interestingly, diminished A1 receptor expression on macrophages from patients with multiple sclerosis has been reported, suggesting that increased macrophage activation seen in this disease may be due, in part, to altered adenosine signaling (12). Taken together, these in vivo studies utilizing A1-deficient animals in models of neurological and pulmonary disease support an anti-inflammatory role of A1 receptor activation in vivo.
A1 adenosine receptors and asthma
In contrast to patients with multiple sclerosis, those with asthma are believed to have increased expression of A1 receptor in the lungs. Such increased expression of the A1 receptor has previously been believed to contribute to the asthmatic phenotype largely through its capacity to facilitate adenosine-induced bronchoconstriction (Figure 2). Recently, an antisense oligonucleotide (EPI-2010) that binds the initiation codon of the human A1 receptor has been introduced into clinical trials for asthma (13). Preclinical studies in rabbits and primates focused on the effects of A1 antisense on adenosine- and allergen-induced bronchoconstriction. However, measurements of inflammatory indices such as BAL cellularity or lung histopathology were not reported (13, 14). Thus, while A1 antisense oligonucleotides have been shown to attenuate adenosine- and allergen-induced bronchoconstriction, their effect on the inflammatory component of asthma remains unknown.
The macrophage has been labeled as the forgotten cell in asthma, but data from animal models suggest that it may play an important anti-inflammatory role in allergic inflammation (15). ADA/A1-deficient mice provide the first in vivo evidence suggesting that adenosine signaling through the A1 receptor represents a nonredundant anti-inflammatory signal to the pulmonary macrophage, which dampens the inflammatory response. If these findings can be extrapolated from mice to humans, then the potential clinical benefits of blocking A1 receptors on airway smooth muscle, particularly in the adenosine-rich environment of an asthma attack, may be offset by increased inflammation. While we await more data, have another cup of coffee!
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