Skip to ContentSkip to Navigation
About us Latest news News News articles

Major role of the matrix in airway smooth muscle phenotype plasticity - Implications for chronic asthma

25 June 2010

PhD ceremony: Mr. B.G.J. Dekkers, 16.15 uur, Academiegebouw, Broerstraat 5, Groningen

Thesis: Major role of the matrix in airway smooth muscle phenotype plasticity - Implications for chronic asthma

Promotor(s): prof. H. Meurs, prof. J. Zaagsma

Faculty: Mathematics and Natural Sciences

 

The results of Bart Dekkers for the first time demonstrate that ECM proteins importantly contribute to ASM changes in asthma. Moreover, peptides with the RGD motif may represent an interesting novel therapeutic approach for the treatment of asthma.

Allergic asthma is a chronic inflammatory airway disease, characterized by increased responsiveness of the airways to a variety of bronchial obstructive stimuli. This airway hyperresponsiveness is importantly determined by alterations in the airway wall, including increased airway smooth muscle (ASM) mass and -contractility and changes in the extracellular matrix (ECM). Dekkers describes in his thesis the effects of various ECM proteins on ASM function in relation to the pathophysiology of asthma.

It was demonstrated by him that the ECM proteins collagen I and fibronectin, like growth factors such as platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF), induced a proliferative, hypocontractile ASM phenotype, characterized by increased cell proliferation and decreased contractility of the muscle. This is caused by interaction with specific integrin receptors on the ASM cell and subsequent activation of integrin-coupled intracellular signalling cascades. Conversely, laminin-111 and laminin-211 induced a (hyper)contractile and hypoproliferative phenotype.

The effects of collagen I and PDGF on ASM function were effectively and synergistically inhibited by a combination of glucocorticosteroids and beta 2-agonists, the cornerstone of current asthma therapy. Interestingly, this combination prevented glucocorticosteroid resistance induced by collagen I.

In a guinea pig model of chronic allergic asthma, allergen-induced increased ASM mass and contractility were prevented by inhalation of the peptide arginine-glycine-aspartic acid-serine (RGDS), which antagonizes the interaction of above-mentioned ECM proteins with specific arginine-glycine-aspartic acid (RGD)-binding integrins.

Last modified:13 March 2020 01.15 a.m.
View this page in: Nederlands

More news

  • 29 April 2024

    Tactile sensors

    Every two weeks, UG Makers puts the spotlight on a researcher who has created something tangible, ranging from homemade measuring equipment for academic research to small or larger products that can change our daily lives. That is how UG...

  • 29 April 2024

    Behind the scenes: how UG and Hanze UAS students are jointly developing a Mars rover

    This year the students of the Makercie team are participating in the physical edition of the European Rover Challenge in Poland. Read more about the team and the collaboration between the RUG and Hanze UAS here.

  • 23 April 2024

    Nine MSCA Doctoral Network grants for FSE researchers

    Nine researchers of the Faculty of Science and Engineering have received a Horizon Europe Marie Sklodowska Curie Doctoral Network grant.