Requirement for Fucosyltransferase 2 in Allergic Airway Hyperreactivity and Mucus Obstruction

Naoko Hara, Dorota S. Raclawska, Leslie E. Morgan, James C. NeeDell, Lucie Dao, Ayako Kato,Ana M. Jaramillo,Patrick S. Hume,Fernando Holguin,William J. Janssen,Eszter K. Vladar,Christopher M. Evans

crossref(2024)

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摘要
Mucus hypersecretion is an important pathological problem in respiratory diseases. Mucus accumulates in the airways of people with asthma, and it contributes to airflow limitation by forming plugs that occlude airways. Current treatments have minimal effects on mucus or its chief components, the polymeric mucin glycoproteins MUC5AC and MUC5B. This treatment gap reflects a poor molecular understanding of mucins that could be used to determine how they contribute to airway obstruction. Due to the prominence of glycosylation as a defining characteristic of mucins, we investigated characteristics of mucin glycans in asthma and in a mouse model of allergic asthma. Mucin fucosylation was observed in asthma, and in healthy mice it was induced as part of a mucous metaplastic response to allergic inflammation. In allergically inflamed mouse airways, mucin fucosylation was dependent on the enzyme fucosyltransferase 2 (Fut2). Fut2 gene deficient mice were protected from asthma-like airway hyperreactivity and mucus plugging. These findings provide mechanistic and translational links between observations in human asthma and a mouse model, which can help in therapeutic targeting of airway mucus. ### Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest.
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