Wellness & Healthy Living

Researchers find how pollution hampers lung function and how to reverse it

View 2 Images
Scientists have identified how air pollution damages lung function – and potentially how to treat it
Scientists have identified how air pollution damages lung function – and potentially how to treat it
Exposure to PM2.5 leads to the production of reactive aldehydes that cause ciliary dysfunction
University of Osaka/Yasutaka Okabe (Created with BioRender.com)

New research has identified the mechanism by which air pollution damages the lungs’ self-cleaning system, leaving us vulnerable to infection. In doing so, it has also identified a way to reverse that damage and restore lung function.

We already know that exposure to air pollution is bad for us, and it’s particularly damaging for our lungs. However, what happens at the molecular level to cause that lung damage hasn’t been well known until now.

A new study led by researchers from the Immunology Frontier Research Center (IFReC) at the University of Osaka, Japan, has identified the mechanism by which air pollution damages the airways and, in the process, identified a treatment to potentially reverse it.

“Our results were quite informative,” said lead author Noriko Shinjyo, PhD, an IFReC researcher. “We found that PM2.5 air pollutants negatively affect mucociliary clearance, a major protective mechanism in the respiratory tract. Mucociliary clearance basically involves trapping pollutants in a sticky mucus and then sweeping the pollutants out [of] the airway with hair-like projections called cilia.”

Ciliated cells are lung cells lined with hair-like structures called cilia. As Shinjyo has stated, the cilia play a crucial role in clearing debris from the airways. Each ciliated cell in an airway is equipped with 200 to 300 cilia, the presence of which increases the surface area of these cells to, it’s estimated, hundreds of times higher than that of regular cells. That’s what makes ciliated cells a major point of contact with environmental pollutants.

Fine particulate matter, called PM2.5 because its particles are 2.5 micrometers or smaller, commonly comes from natural and human-made sources: cars and truck exhaust, coal-fired power stations, industrial facilities, wildfires and dust storms. Many of these pollutants can generate reactive oxygen species (ROS), leading to oxidative stress that can damage cells and tissues, ultimately resulting in health problems.

Exposure to PM2.5 leads to the production of reactive aldehydes that cause ciliary dysfunction
University of Osaka/Yasutaka Okabe (Created with BioRender.com)

The researchers found that pollutants cause the polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) found in ciliated cell membranes to undergo oxidation, resulting in the formation of reactive molecules called lipid peroxide-derived aldehydes in the airways. Their reactivity allows them to modify the cells, leading to dysfunction and damage that can extend to the cilia. When they’re damaged, the cells and their attached cilia are less able to move debris out of the lungs, thereby increasing the risk of infection.

Investigating ways to reverse cellular damage and restore normal function, the researchers examined a gene that produces aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH1A1), an enzyme involved in breaking down aldehydes.

“Aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH1A1) is an enzyme that plays an important role in protection against aldehydes,” said the study’s corresponding author, Yasutaka Okabe, an Associate Professor at IFReC with a particular interest in the mechanisms of airway homeostasis. “We used experimental mice that lacked ALDH1A1 to investigate the impact of air pollutants without the gene. As expected, the mice had impaired cilia formation and function and high levels of aldehydes.”

The mice lacking ALDH1A1 were also at increased risk of developing a serious lung infection when exposed to PM2.5. However, when the researchers administered a drug that increased the mice's ALDH1A1 levels, their mucociliary function was restored.

“Altogether, these results demonstrate aldehyde metabolism ensures ciliary resilience and illuminates its therapeutic potential in mitigating respiratory disorders associated with air pollution,” the researchers said.

Future research will investigate the impact of aldehyde metabolism in other respiratory diseases, including asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and cystic fibrosis, which have also been linked to PM2.5 exposure.

The study was published in the Journal of Clinical Investigation.

Sources: IFReC, EurekAlert!

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Flipboard
  • LinkedIn
  • Reddit
3 comments
Alan
Great, now how about a fix for emphysema?
When I think about critical body parts such as the lung or heart, it seems crazy that even after millions of years of evolution, that these important organs have not yet developed the means for self-repair!
TechGazer
Great: another drug to reduce the risk of one problem, which in a couple of decades will turn out to increase the risk of some other problem. I'd rather see more effort made into reducing pollution. The good result of this research is numerical evidence which can be used when arguments about pollution reduction decisions have to be made. Maybe this lung damage data can project costs to businesses, medical costs, tax revenues, etc.
Steve Pretty
Right now, we are all exposed to this form of pollution - so I was curious to see if there might be anything we could do as a result of this finding. The research used a drug called alda 1. Not something readily available. I did find a report (PLoS One. 2016 Dec 20;11(12):e0168463. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0168463) which looked at Sulforphane from cruciforous vegetable in a similar context. Cabbage was the best followed by brocolli, cauliflower, turnip and radish. So just maybe, we can get some protection from air pollution by eating these more regularly? As they always say - more research is required.