Publication:
Cellular stress modulates severity of the inflammatory response in lungs via cell surface BiP.

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Date

2022-11-18

Authors

Rico-Llanos, Gustavo
Porras-Perales, Oscar
Escalante, Sandra
Vazquez-Calero, Daniel B
Valiente, Lucia
Castillo, Maria I
Perez-Tejeiro, Jose Miguel
Baglietto-Vargas, David
Becerra, Jose
Reguera, Jose Maria

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Frontiers Researcch Foundation
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Abstract

Inflammation is a central pathogenic feature of the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) in COVID-19. Previous pathologies such as diabetes, autoimmune or cardiovascular diseases become risk factors for the severe hyperinflammatory syndrome. A common feature among these risk factors is the subclinical presence of cellular stress, a finding that has gained attention after the discovery that BiP (GRP78), a master regulator of stress, participates in the SARS-CoV-2 recognition. Here, we show that BiP serum levels are higher in COVID-19 patients who present certain risk factors. Moreover, early during the infection, BiP levels predict severe pneumonia, supporting the use of BiP as a prognosis biomarker. Using a mouse model of pulmonary inflammation, we observed increased levels of cell surface BiP (cs-BiP) in leukocytes during inflammation. This corresponds with a higher number of neutrophiles, which show naturally high levels of cs-BiP, whereas alveolar macrophages show a higher than usual exposure of BiP in their cell surface. The modulation of cellular stress with the use of a clinically approved drug, 4-PBA, resulted in the amelioration of the lung hyperinflammatory response, supporting the anti-stress therapy as a valid therapeutic strategy for patients developing ARDS. Finally, we identified stress-modulated proteins that shed light into the mechanism underlying the cellular stress-inflammation network in lungs.

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MeSH Terms

Humans
COVID-19
SARS-CoV-2
Respiratory Distress Syndrome
Inflammation
Endoplasmic Reticulum Chaperone BiP
Lung

DeCS Terms

Inflamación
Neumonía
Pulmón
Macrófagos Alveolares
Síndrome de Dificultad Respiratoria

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Keywords

4-PBA, COVID-19, TNFa, Acute respiratory distress syndrome, Binding-immunoglobulinprotein (BiP/GRP78/HSPA5), Cell surface GRP78 (csGRP78), Cellular stress, Cytokine storm

Citation

Rico-Llanos G, Porras-Perales Ó, Escalante S, Vázquez-Calero DB, Valiente L, Castillo MI, et al. Cellular stress modulates severity of the inflammatory response in lungs via cell surface BiP. Front Immunol. 2022 Nov 18;13:1054962