Originally published as JHC exPRESS on October 29, 2007. doi:10.1369/jhc.7A7319.2007
Volume 56 (2): 147-155, 2008 Copyright ©The Histochemical Society, Inc. Regulation of Expression and Function of Dipeptidyl Peptidase 4 (DP4), DP8/9, and DP10 in Allergic Responses of the Lung in Rats
Department of Functional and Applied Anatomy, Hannover Medical School, Hannover, Germany (JS,MS,AS,NF,CK,RP,SvH); Probiodrug AG, Halle (Saale), Germany (LW,AJN,H-UD); and Experimental Therapy, Franz Penzoldt Center, University of Erlangen, Erlangen, Germany (KAR,SvH) Correspondence to: Dr. Stephan von Hörsten, Experimental Therapy, Franz Penzoldt Center, Friedrich-Alexander University, Erlangen-Nürnberg, Palmsanlage 5, 91054 Erlangen, Germany. E-mail: Stephan.v.Hoersten{at}ze.uni-erlangen.de
The expression of dipeptidyl peptidase 4 (DP4, CD26) affects T-cell recruitment to lungs in an experimental rat asthma model. Furthermore, the gene of the structural homologous DP10 represents a susceptibility locus for asthma in humans, and the functional homologous DP8/9 are expressed in human leukocytes. Thus, although several mechanisms may account for a role of DP4-like peptidases in asthma, detailed information on their anatomical sites of expression and function in lungs is lacking. Therefore, bronchi and lung parenchyma were evaluated using immunohistochemistry and histochemical/enzymatic activity assays, as well as quantitative real-time PCR for this family of peptidases in naïve and asthmatic rat lungs derived from wild-type F344 and DP4-deficient F344 rat strains. Surprisingly, results show not only that the induction of experimental asthma increases DP4 enzymatic activity in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid and parenchyma, but also that DP8/9 enzymatic activity is regulated and, as well as the expression of DP10, primarily found in the bronchial epithelium of the airways. This is the first report showing a differential and site-specific DP4-like expression and function in the lungs, suggesting a pathophysiologically significant role in asthma. (J Histochem Cytochem 56:147–155, 2008)
Key Words: dipeptidyl peptidase 4 dipeptidyl peptidases 8/9 dipeptidyl peptidase 10 asthma lung bronchi F344 rat substrains DP4-like activity
ASTHMA IS A CHRONIC inflammatory disease of the airways, which is characterized by bronchial hyper-responsiveness and airway obstruction and is accompanied by wheezing, coughing, and breathlessness (Busse and Lemanske 2001
In line with this concept, it was recently demonstrated that lack of DP4/CD26 expression in a deficient rat model remarkably reduces T-cell recruitment to the lungs during experimental asthma (Kruschinski et al. 2005 For a better understanding of these important indications of the role of DP4-like peptidases in asthma, the present study investigates in detail their sites of expression in rat lungs with and without an allergic-like inflammation status.
Animals Male wild-type F344/Ztm rats (DP4pos) and male DP4 mutant rats [F344/Crl(Wiga)SvH-Dpp4m] lacking DP4 activity as well as DP4 expression (DP4neg) were used (Karl et al. 2003
Sensitization and Allergen Challenge
Dissection of Animals
Synthesis of the Histochemical Substrate H-Gly-L-Pro-1-hydroxy-4-naphthylamide Hydrochloride
Histochemical Activity Assay Light microscopy investigations were carried out on a Nikon Eclipse 80i microscope (Nikon GmbH; Duesseldorf, Germany), and representative pictures were taken with a MicroFire digital microscope camera (Optronics; Goleta, CA).
Immunohistochemistry Similarly, rabbit polyclonal antibodies against DP8 (Abcam; Cambridge, United Kingdom, 1:500), DP9 (Abcam; 1:1000), and DP10 (Abcam; 1:250) were incubated on 10-µm lung sections using a mouse anti-rabbit antibody (Dako; 1:50) for 30 min after the 30 min incubation with the primary antibody, and a hemalaun counterstaining (Merck; 1:5 in PBS) for 20 sec after the APAAP staining with Fast Red.
Enzymatic Activity Assay In Vitro
Quantitative Real-time PCR PCR was carried out on a thermal cycler (Eppendorf; Hamburg, Germany). The 50-µl reaction mixture was composed of 75 ng cDNA, 200 µM deoxynucleotide triphosphate, 0.1 µM primer (each), 1x PCR buffer (minus Mg), 1.5 mM MgCl2, and 2.5 U Taq (Invitrogen). The protocol contained a 5-min initial denaturation step at 95C and 35 cycles of the following steps: 30-sec denaturation at 95C, 1-min primer annealing at a primer-specific temperature (Table 1 ), and 45-sec extension at 72C. A final extension step for 5 min at 72C was performed. To visualize the PCR products, gel electrophoresis (2% agarose in Tris acetate EDTA buffer) was performed, and 15 µl of the final PCR product was applied to the gel. This protocol was used for all primers except DP10. Because of the low amounts of the DP10 PCR product, 90 ng cDNA was used in a 50-µl preparation, 40 cycles were performed, and 30 µl of the final PCR product was applied to the agarose gel.
Quantitative real-time PCR was carried out on an iCycler thermal cycler with the iQ5 real-time PCR detection system (Bio-Rad; Munich, Germany) using a SYBR green detection protocol (Qiagen) with 12.5 ng of each cDNA and a final concentration of 0.6 µM of each primer per preparation. A 15-min initial activation step at 95C was performed, followed by 45 cycles of 15-sec denaturation at 95C, annealing for 30 sec at a primer-specific temperature, and 30-sec extension at 72C. Primers for the detection of DP4, DP8, DP9, DP10, and the housekeeping gene ribosomal protein L13a (RPL13a) were designed based on sequences from the National Center for Biotechnology Information database (RPL13a: NM_173340; DP4: NM_012789; DP8: XM_236345; DP9: XM_217309; DP10: NM_001012205) using the Primer3 application (Rozen and Skaletsky 2000
Statistical Analysis
By means of the histochemical activity assay, the localization of sites exhibiting DP4, DP8, and DP9 enzymatic activity in rat lungs under naïve (control) and asthmatic conditions was documented in DP4-negative and DP4-positive rat lungs. Positive blue precipitates in lungs of DP4-negative rats or of those incubated with a DP4-specific inhibitor were interpreted as DP8/9 specific. Thus, the blue staining of lung sections obtained from wild-type Fischer rats represents the sum of the enzymatic activity of the three dipeptidyl peptidases, DP4, DP8, and DP9, visible even after 25 min of incubation. No staining was detectable on control sections of DP4-positive lungs incubated for 20 hr in NBT without substrate (not shown). Incubation periods of 25 min and 20 hr appeared well-suited to analyze the enzymatic activity on DP4-positive and DP4-negative lung sections. Although NBT inhibits the activity of DP2, the resulting staining on the lung sections of DP4-positive rats is caused by the cumulative activity of DP4, DP8, and DP9 (Figures 1A –1C and 1G–1I), and the staining on lung sections of DP4-negative rats (Figures 1D–1F and 1J–1L) is based only on DP8 and DP9 enzymatic activity.
The enzymatic reaction product of cumulative DP4-like peptidases in lung sections was much more pronounced compared with the DP8 and DP9 activity. This was clearly demonstrated by comparing DP4-positive and -negative lung sections after an incubation period of 20 hr (Figures 1G and 1J) and was even visible after 25 min in the lung parenchyma (Figures 1A and 1D). Although there was no remaining staining at all after 25 min on DP4-negative sections (Figure 1D), a slight blue staining was visible on DP4-positive sections (Figure 1A). After 20 hr, the DP4-positive sections were intensely blue-colored (Figure 1G), whereas the DP4-negative sections were only faintly blue-stained (Figure 1J). The comparison of DP4-positive and -negative sections also revealed differential DP4-like activities in different compartments of the lungs. Although the DP4 activity was very pronounced in lung parenchyma (Figure 1G), the activity of DP8 and DP9 was primarily located in the bronchi (Figure 1J) and to a lesser extent in the parenchyma. The bronchi of DP4-positive and -negative sections showed almost no difference after 20 hr (Figures 1H and 1K), which indicated that the activity in the bronchi was mainly derived from DP8 and DP9. This finding was confirmed by the additional use of a DP4-specific inhibitor (Figures 1M and 1N). Incubation of a DP4-positive section in the presence of this inhibitor (Figure 1M) showed the same staining pattern and kinetics as incubation of a DP4-negative section in the solution (Figure 1N), as did DP4-negative sections in the solution without this inhibitor. Thus, the genetic model and pharmacological approach were cross-validated and strongly suggest specificity of findings. In addition to the different compartmentalization of DP4 and DP8/9 activity, an upregulation of their activities after induction of asthma was observed (Figures 2A –2E). In addition to the enzymatic activity assay on lung sections, the enzymatic activity of both rat substrains was also measured in vitro. Plasma and BAL fluid samples from DP4-negative rats showed only a very low DP4-like enzymatic activity. The DP4-like activity of the plasma samples did not vary between the naïve control group and the asthma group (data not shown), whereas the DP4-like activity of BAL fluid samples showed a significant asthma-specific treatment effect (p=0.01), in addition to a significant effect of the genetic background (p<0.0001) (Figure 2A). In line with the findings in the BAL, the histochemical determination of DP4 enzymatic activity in the lung parenchyma of F344 wild-type rats of the asthma group (Figure 2C) appeared to be upregulated, compared with the control group (Figure 2B) after an incubation period of 25 min. In addition, the activity of DP8/9 appeared to be upregulated in the bronchi after asthma induction (Figure 2E), compared with the control group (Figure 2D) after an incubation period of 20 hr.
Immunohistochemical staining for DP4-like proteins further confirmed and complemented our findings based on enzymatic assays (Figures 2F–2Q). Staining of DP4-positive lungs from rats of the control group and the asthma group with a monoclonal antibody against DP4 also revealed no antibody binding in the bronchi (Figure 2F) and a more pronounced staining of lungs after asthma induction (Figure 2H) compared with control lungs (Figure 2G), which is indicative of an upregulation of DP4 protein expression and also in accordance with an increase of DP4 enzymatic activity on tissue and in vitro. Immunohistochemical characterization of DP8, DP9, and DP10 protein expression under naïve and asthmatic conditions also provided evidence of an upregulation of these proteins after induction of experimental asthma. In contrast to DP4, these three peptidases appeared to be strongly expressed in the bronchi and in some leukocytes, but were weakly expressed in the parenchyma. This was most noticeable in lungs that were not lavaged (Figures 2I, 2L, and 2O), but was also evident in lungs after the BAL procedure (Figures 2J–K, 2M–2N, and 2P–2Q). To obtain additional information regarding mRNA expression levels of DP4, DP8, DP9, and DP10, PCR and real-time PCR approaches were performed (Figure 3A ). Taken together, the real-time PCR data of DP4, DP8, and DP9 revealed treatment effects between naïve and asthmatic lungs, whereas no differences were observed when comparing DP4-positive and DP4-negative substrains (Figures 3B–3D). Specifically, although the expression of DP4 did not differ after asthma induction (Figure 3B), the expression of DP8 and DP9 (Figures 3C and 3D) was significantly upregulated in the asthma group compared with the control group (p=0.02 for DP8 and p=0.02 for DP9).
Highest mRNA coding for DP10 was found in the brain, followed by trachea and bronchi, but could not be amplified in samples from whole lung and from lung parenchyma (Figure 3E). Apparently, the expression in tissues that were not lavaged (Lanes 3–5) were higher compared with tissues from rats after a BAL (Lanes 6–8), and this was in line with observations on immunohistochemical stainings with a DP10 antibody. In general, because the BAL procedure removes leukocytes and proteins from airways of the lungs, this reduced mRNA expression pattern and faint immunohistochemical-based protein detection suggest significant leukocyte-associated and soluble components of these DP4-like proteins in asthma.
In this study, a site-specific and disease-associated expression of the dipeptidyl peptidases DP4, DP8, DP9, and DP10 in lungs was documented in an F344 rat model of bronchial asthma.
Regulation of DP4 expression during experimental asthma provides further evidence for its involvement in the regulation of inflammatory processes. Probably, DP4 is not only an inflammatory marker per se but also exhibits distinct functional properties within this process. For example, it has been shown recently that a genetically induced DP4 deficiency is associated with blunted T-cell recruitment to the lungs in asthma (Kruschinski et al. 2005
The documented upregulation of DP4-like activity in the BAL fluid of DP4-positive rats after asthma induction is contrary to observations by others (van der Velden et al. 1999
The site-specific activity and expression of DP4 and its related peptidases, DP8, DP9, and DP10, indicate their differential functional roles during allergic diseases such as bronchial asthma. The fact that asthma is a disease of the airways, and the observation that DP10 and the activities of DP8 and DP9 are primarily located in the bronchi, strongly suggest an involvement of these peptidases during the clinical course of asthma. In humans, the DP10 gene has already been identified as a locus for asthma susceptibility (Allen et al. 2003
The observation that DP8 and DP9 mRNA levels are upregulated during asthma induction and the localization of their activity in the bronchi suggest that these intracellular peptidases specifically respond to the inflammatory stimulus. Elevated DP8 mRNA levels have also been documented in activated lymphocytes (Abbott et al. 2000 In conclusion, because asthma is a disease of the airways, a site-specific expression and a regulation of DP4 and the DP4-like peptidases DP8, DP9, and DP10 in the whole lung and especially in the bronchi after asthma induction point to their potential role in asthma, which should be further investigated.
This study was supported by the German Research Foundation (SFB 587, project B11). We thank Susanne Kuhlmann, Susanne Fassbender, and Antje Hamann for skillful technical assistance, Tina Beekmann for preparing the cDNA, and Sheila Fryk for the correction of the English.
Received for publication July 18, 2007; accepted October 10, 2007
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