[HTML][HTML] Human β-defensin-1 is a salt-sensitive antibiotic in lung that is inactivated in cystic fibrosis

MJ Goldman, GM Anderson, ED Stolzenberg, UP Kari… - Cell, 1997 - cell.com
MJ Goldman, GM Anderson, ED Stolzenberg, UP Kari, M Zasloff, JM Wilson
Cell, 1997cell.com
A human bronchial xenograft model was used to characterize the molecular basis for the
previously described defect in bacterial killing that is present in the cystic fibrosis (CF) lung.
Airway surface fluid from CF grafts contained abnormally high NaCl and failed to kill
bacteria, defects that were corrected with adenoviral vectors. A full-length clone for the only
known human β-defensin (ie, hBD-1) was isolated. This gene is expressed throughout the
respiratory epithelia of non-CF and CF lungs, and its protein product shows salt-dependent …
Abstract
A human bronchial xenograft model was used to characterize the molecular basis for the previously described defect in bacterial killing that is present in the cystic fibrosis (CF) lung. Airway surface fluid from CF grafts contained abnormally high NaCl and failed to kill bacteria, defects that were corrected with adenoviral vectors. A full-length clone for the only known human β-defensin (i.e., hBD-1) was isolated. This gene is expressed throughout the respiratory epithelia of non-CF and CF lungs, and its protein product shows salt-dependent antimicrobial activity to P. aeruginosa. Antisense oligonucleotides to hBD-1 ablated the antimicrobial activity in airway surface fluid from non-CF grafts. These data suggest that hBD-1 plays an important role in innate immunity that is compromised in CF by its salt-dependent inactivation.
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