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Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol (May 15, 2009). doi:10.1152/ajplung.90453.2008
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Submitted on August 21, 2008
Revised on April 27, 2009
Accepted on May 13, 2009

Insulin Receptor Substrate-1/2 Mediates IL-4-Induced Migration of Human Air-way Epithelial Cells

Steven R. White1*, Linda D. Martin2, Mark K. Abe1, Bertha A. Marroquin1, Randi Stern1, and Xiaoying Fu2

1 University of Chicago
2 North Carolina State University

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: swhite{at}medicine.bsd.uchicago.edu.

Migration of airway epithelial cells (AEC) is an integral component of airway mucosal repair after injury. The inflammatory cytokine IL-4, abundant in chronic inflammatory airways diseases such as asthma, stimulates over-production of mucins and secretion of chemokines from AEC; these actions enhance persistent airway inflammation. The effect of IL-4 on AEC migration and repair after injury, however, is not known. We examined migration in primary human AEC differentiated in air-liquid interface culture for 3 wk. Wounds were created by mechanical abrasion and followed to closure using digital microscopy. Concurrent treatment with IL-4 up to 10 ng/ml accelerated migration significantly in fully differentiated AEC. As expected, IL-4 treatment induced phosphorylation of the IL-4 receptor-associated protein STAT (signal trans-ducer and activator of transcription)6, a transcription factor known to mediate several IL-4-induced AEC responses. Expressing a dominant negative STAT6 cDNA delivered by lentivirus infection, however, failed to block IL-4 stimulated migration. In contrast, decreasing expression of either insulin receptor substrate (IRS)-1 or IRS-2 using a silencing hairpin RNA blocked IL-4 stimulated AEC migration completely. These data demonstrate that IL-4 can accelerate migration of differentiated AEC after injury. This reparative response does not require STAT6 activation, but rather requires IRS-1 and/or IRS-2.







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