Attenuation of nitrogen mustard-induced pulmonary injury and fibrosis by anti-tumor necrosis factor-α antibody

Rama Malaviya, Vasanthi R. Sunil, Alessandro Venosa, Vivianne L. Verissimo, Jessica A. Cervelli, Kinal N. Vayas, Le Roy Hall, Jeffrey D. Laskin, Debra L. Laskin

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

54 Scopus citations

Abstract

Nitrogen mustard (NM) is a bifunctional alkylating agent that causes acute injury to the lung that progresses to fibrosis. This is accompanied by a prominent infiltration of macrophages into the lung and upregulation of proinflammatory/profibrotic cytokines including tumor necrosis factor (TNF)α. In these studies, we analyzed the ability of anti-TNFα antibody to mitigate NM-induced lung injury, inflammation, and fibrosis. Treatment of rats with anti-TNFα antibody (15 mg/kg, iv, every 9 days) beginning 30 min after intratracheal administration of NM (0.125 mg/kg) reduced progressive histopathologic alterations in the lung including perivascular and peribronchial edema, macrophage/monocyte infiltration, interstitial thickening, bronchiolization of alveolar walls, fibrin deposition, emphysema, and fibrosis. NM-induced damage to the alveolar-epithelial barrier, measured by bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) protein and cell content, was also reduced by anti-TNFα antibody, along with expression of the oxidative stress marker, heme oxygenase-1. Whereas the accumulation of proinflammatory/cytotoxic M1 macrophages in the lung in response to NM was suppressed by anti-TNFα antibody, anti-inflammatory/profibrotic M2 macrophages were increased or unchanged. Treatment of rats with anti-TNFα antibody also reduced NM-induced increases in expression of the profibrotic mediator, transforming growth factor-β. This was associated with a reduction in NM-induced collagen deposition in the lung. These data suggest that inhibiting TNFα may represent an efficacious approach to mitigating lung injury induced by mustards.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numberkfv161
Pages (from-to)71-88
Number of pages18
JournalToxicological Sciences
Volume148
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2015

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Toxicology

Keywords

  • Alveolar macrophages
  • Fibrosis
  • Lung injury
  • Vesicant

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