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Functional role of kallikrein 5 and proteinase-activated receptor 2 in eosinophilic esophagitis
Author(s) -
Nurit P. Azouz,
Andrea M. Klingler,
Purnima Pathre,
John A. Besse,
Netali Ben-Baruch Morgenstern,
Adina Ballaban,
G. A. Osswald,
Michael Brusilovsky,
J. Habel,
Julie M. Caldwell,
Mario Alberto Ynga-Durand,
Pablo Abonia,
Yueh-Chiang Hu,
Ting Wen,
Marc E. Rothenberg
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
science translational medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.819
H-Index - 216
eISSN - 1946-6242
pISSN - 1946-6234
DOI - 10.1126/scitranslmed.aaz7773
Subject(s) - eosinophilic esophagitis , kallikrein , immunology , eosinophilia , tryptase , medicine , cancer research , biology , pathology , mast cell , disease , biochemistry , enzyme
Eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE) is a chronic, food antigen-driven, inflammatory disease of the esophagus and is associated with impaired barrier function. Evidence is emerging that loss of esophageal expression of the serine peptidase inhibitor, kazal type 7 (SPINK7), is an upstream event in EoE pathogenesis. Here, we provide evidence that loss of SPINK7 mediates its pro-EoE effects via kallikrein 5 (KLK5) and its substrate, protease-activated receptor 2 (PAR2). Overexpression of KLK5 in differentiated esophageal epithelial cells recapitulated the effect of SPINK7 gene silencing, including barrier impairment and loss of desmoglein-1 expression. Conversely, KLK5 deficiency attenuated allergen-induced esophageal protease activity, modified commensal microbiome composition, and attenuated eosinophilia in a murine model of EoE. Inhibition of PAR2 blunted the cytokine production associated with loss of SPINK7 in epithelial cells and attenuated the allergen-induced esophageal eosinophilia in vivo. Clinical samples substantiated dysregulated PAR2 expression in the esophagus of patients with EoE, and delivery of the clinically approved drug α1 antitrypsin (A1AT, a protease inhibitor) inhibited experimental EoE. These findings demonstrate a role for the balance between KLK5 and protease inhibitors in the esophagus and highlight EoE as a protease-mediated disease. We suggest that antagonizing KLK5 and/or PAR2 has potential to be therapeutic for EoE.

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