Abstract
Inflammatory lung diseases are characterised by increased expression of multiple inflammatory genes that are regulated by proinflammatory transcription factors, such as nuclear factor-κB. Gene expression is regulated by acetylation of core histones through the action of coactivators, such as CREB-binding protein, with intrinsic histone acetyltransferase (HAT) activity.
Conversely, gene repression is mediated via histone deacetylases (HDACs) and other corepressors. In asthma, there is an increase in HAT activity and some reduction in HDAC activity, which is restored by corticosteroid therapy. Corticosteroids switch off inflammatory genes in asthma through the inhibition of HAT activity and by the recruitment of HDAC2 to the activated inflammatory gene complex. In chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, there is a reduction in HDAC2 activity and expression, which may account for the amplified inflammation and resistance to the actions of corticosteroids. The reduction in HDAC2 may be secondary to oxidative and nitrative stress as a result of cigarette smoking and severe inflammation, and may also occur in severe asthma, smoking asthmatic patients and cystic fibrosis.
Similar mechanisms may also account for the steroid resistance seen with latent adenovirus infections. The reduction in histone deacetylase activity can be restored by theophylline, which may be able to reverse steroid resistance in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and other inflammatory diseases.
Many of the commonest lung diseases, including asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), cystic fibrosis, interstitial lung disease and acute respiratory distress syndrome, involve inflammation, with the coordinate expression of multiple inflammatory genes in the lungs. These inflammatory genes code for the expression of cytokines, chemokines, enzymes that synthesise inflammatory mediators, inflammatory mediator receptors and adhesion molecules, resulting in a coordinated influx and activation of inflammatory cells. Many of these inflammatory genes are regulated by proinflammatory transcription factors, including nuclear factor (NF)-κB and activator protein (AP)-1. These transcription factors orchestrate, amplify and perpetuate the inflammatory response and form the molecular basis of chronic inflammation 1–3. Recently, much more has been learned about the molecular mechanisms that switch on inflammatory genes and, even more importantly, the mechanisms for switching off these genes that can be exploited in therapy. Modification of core histones, around which DNA is wound within the chromosomes, plays a critical role in regulating the expression of all genes, and in determining which genes are activated and which genes are repressed. Histone acetylation is a major modification that affects gene transcription and is controlled by histone acetyltransferases (HATs). In contrast, histone deacetylases (HDACs), which remove the acetyl groups from hyperacetylated histones, counteract the effects of HATs and return histone to its basal state, with the concomitant suppression of gene transcription. This review focuses on the critical role of histone acetylation in the regulation of inflammatory genes. Understanding the role of histone acetylation is now providing important insights into the mechanism of action of corticosteroids in treating inflammatory diseases, such as asthma, and the mechanisms of resistance to steroids in COPD and other severe inflammatory lung diseases. These new concepts are now also pointing the way towards the development of novel therapeutic approaches.
HISTONES AND CHROMATIN REMODELLING
Since the 1960s, it has been recognised that acetylation of histones and remodelling of the tightly packed chromatin structure is associated with gene induction 4. However, only in the last 8 yrs have the molecular mechanisms whereby inflammatory genes are switched on by transcription factors and histone acetylation become much better understood. Alteration of the structure of chromatin is critical to the regulation of gene expression. Chromatin is made up of nucleosomes, which are particles consisting of DNA associated with an octomer of two molecules each of the core histone proteins (H2A, H2B, H4 and H4), around which 146 base pairs of DNA are wound (fig. 1⇓). In the resting cell, DNA is wound tightly around these basic core histones, excluding the binding of the enzyme RNA polymerase II, which activates the formation of messenger RNA. This conformation of the chromatin structure is described as closed, and is associated with the suppression of gene expression. Gene transcription only occurs when the chromatin structure is opened up, with unwinding of DNA so that RNA polymerase II and basal transcription complexes can now bind to the naked DNA to initiate transcription. When proinflammatory transcription factors, such as NF-κB, are activated, they bind to specific recognition sequences in DNA and subsequently interact with large coactivator molecules, such as CREB-binding protein (CBP), p300 and p300/CBP-associated factor (PCAF; fig. 2⇓). These coactivator molecules act as the molecular switches that control gene transcription and all have intrinsic HAT activity 5, 6. Each core histone has a long terminal, which is rich in lysine residues that may be acetylated, thus changing the electrical charge of the core histone. This results in acetylation of core histones, thereby reducing their charge, which allows the chromatin structure to transform from the resting closed conformation to an activated open form 6. Thus, this allows binding of TATA box-binding protein (TBP), TBP-associated factors and, finally, RNA polymerase II, which initiates gene transcription (fig. 3⇓). This molecular mechanism is probably common to all genes, including those involved in differentiation, proliferation and activation of cells. Just as acetylation of histones is associated with gene induction, the removal of acetyl groups by HDACs is associated with repacking of chromatin and a lack of gene expression or gene silencing (fig. 3⇓) 7.
Recently, these fundamental mechanisms have been applied in understanding the regulation of inflammatory genes that become activated in airway diseases. In a human epithelial cell line, activation of NF-κB (induced by exposing the cell to inflammatory signals, such as interleukin (IL)-1β, tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-α or endotoxin) results in acetylation of specific lysine residues on histone H4 (histone H3 does not appear to be so markedly or rapidly acetylated by inflammatory signals), and this is correlated with an increased expression of inflammatory genes, such as granulocyte–macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) 8. There is a specific pattern of acetylation of histone H4 with preferential acetylation of lysines 8 and 12, and relative sparing of the other two potential targets for acetylation of lysine residues on the N-terminal tail (lysine 5 and lysine 16) 8.
HISTONE DEACETYLASES
HDACs play a critical role in the suppression of gene expression by reversing the hyperacetylation of core histones. Eleven HDACs that deacetylate histones are now recognised in mammalian cells 9, 10 and are classified into two major classes. Class I includes HDAC1, 2, 3, 8 and 11, which bear significant homology to the yeast protein RPD3 and are mainly localised to the nucleus. Class II includes HDAC4, 5, 6, 7, 9 and 10, which are homologous to yeast HAD-1-like enzymes and shuttle between nucleus and cytoplasm. Class I HDACs are widely expressed and are found in most cell types, whereas class II HDACs appear to have a more restricted distribution and may be involved in cellular differentiation. Some HDACs also deacetylate nonhistone proteins such as α-tubulin, p53, p65 and MyoD. There is evidence that these different HDACs target different patterns of acetylation and regulate different genes 11. The different HDACs are also likely to be regulated differently. HDACs interact with corepressor molecules, such as nuclear receptor corepressor, ligand-dependent corepressor, NuRD and mSin3, all of which aid HDACs in gene repression and may provide specificity by selecting which genes are switched off by HDAC 12, 13.
Trichostatin A (TSA) is a nonselective inhibitor of HDACs 14 and, in alveolar macrophages and airway epithelial cell lines, it leads to increased expression of inflammatory genes, such as GM-CSF and IL-8, after activation with inflammatory stimuli 8, 15, 16. This suggests that HDACs normally act to repress the expression of inflammatory genes.
As well as histones, other transcription factors, such as GATA3 and the p65 component of NF-κB, are targets for acetylation and deacetylation, which thereby modulate their transcriptional activity. Thus, HDACs are also associated with inactive p65 and play a role in the regulation of NF-κB-mediated gene transcription without altering DNA binding 17–19. CBP acetylates specific lysine residues on p65, increasing its binding to DNA and causing transcriptional activation. HDACs reverse this process; HDAC1 and HDAC2 are able to deacetylate acetylated NF-κB and promote its association with the inhibitor IκB-α within the nucleus, in order to promote export into the cytoplasm and, thus, terminate the activity of NF-κB 18. Inhibition of these HDACs by TSA results in increased activation of NF-κB and increased expression of inflammatory genes, such as IL-8. Furthermore, changes in the phosphorylation status can switch p65 from interacting with a corepressor (HDAC) to a coactivator CBP (HAT) 19.
A third class of deacetylases are the atypical nicotinamide adenosine dinucleotide-dependent sirtuins. These proteins deacetylate nonhistone proteins and are thought to play a role in programmed cell death in mononuclear cells 20, 21. For example SIRT1, the mammalian equivalent of the yeast silencing information regulator 2, can deacetylate p53, thereby inactivating p53-mediated transcription and apoptosis, regulate Bax-induced apoptosis by deacetylating Ku70 and prevent Forkhead-mediated cell death 22. Recently, SIRT1 has also been reported to deacetylate p65 and control apoptosis in a lung cancer cell line 22.
HISTONE DEACETYLASES IN AIRWAY DISEASES
Asthma
In bronchial biopsies from patients with asthma, there is a marked increase in HAT and a small reduction in HDAC activity compared with normal airways, thus favouring increased inflammatory gene expression 23. Similar changes are found in alveolar macrophages obtained by bronchoalveolar lavage from patients with asthma 24. There is a small reduction in the expression of HDAC1, but expression of HDAC2 and HDAC3 is normal in these cells. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (lymphocytes and monocytes) appear to have normal HAT and HDAC activity, indicating that these changes occur locally in the airways of asthmatic patients. Interestingly, in patients with asthma who smoke, there is a significantly greater reduction of HDAC activity in bronchial biopsies than in nonsmoking asthmatic patients 25, and this may account for why these smoking asthmatics have more severe asthma and resistance to steroids 26.
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
In COPD, there is a marked reduction in HDAC activity in the lung parenchyma, and this decrease is correlated with disease severity 27. The reduction in HDACs in the peripheral lung is selective with a marked reduction in HDAC2, with lesser reduction in HDAC5 and HDAC8 expression, but normal expression of the other HDACs. Furthermore, HDAC5 expression is predominantly cytoplasmic, rather than nuclear, in patients with COPD. In patients with very severe disease (Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD) stage 4), there is a >95% reduction in the expression of HDAC2. The reduction in HDAC activity is related to the intensity of inflammation, as measured by expression of IL-8 and the number of inflammatory cells in small airways 28. Reduced HDAC activity is also related to resistance to the anti-inflammatory effects of corticosteroids, a characteristic feature of COPD. HAT activity is increased and HDAC2 activity is reduced in lungs of rats exposed to cigarette smoke, which show increased NF-κB activation and expression of inflammatory genes 29. By contrast, HAT activity is not increased in COPD patients as it is in asthma, indicating that increased gene transcription in inflammatory diseases may be due to increased HAT, decreased HDAC or a combination of both. Alveolar macrophages from normal smokers also show a reduction in HDAC activity and expression of HDAC2, and this is correlated with an increase in release of TNF-α and IL-8 in response to an inflammatory stimulus 30. There is a further reduction in HDAC activity and expression of HDAC2 in alveolar macrophages from COPD patients.
MECHANISMS OF HISTONE DEACETYLASE IMPAIRMENT
Oxidative and nitrative stress
Oxidative stress acetylates histone H4 in epithelial cell lines, such as A549 and BEAS-B, resulting in an increased release of inflammatory proteins, such as IL-8 16, 31. This involves the activation of the transcription factor NF-κB, which has long been known to be activated by oxidative stress. Oxidative stress also increases the association between the p65 component of NF-κB and CBP 32. The increase in HAT activity may be due to a decrease in HDAC activity, and oxidative stress (hydrogen peroxide) markedly reduces HDAC activity and HDAC2 expression in epithelial cell lines in vitro 33. Hydrogen peroxide and cigarette smoke condensate induce acetylation of histone H4, and decrease HDAC2 activity and expression in these cells, and these effects are reversible by the antioxidant N-acetyl cysteine 34. This mechanism may involve nitration of tyrosine residues in HDAC2 through the formation of peroxynitrite, which is generated through an interaction of superoxide anions and nitric oxide. A peroxynitrite-generating compound, 3-morpholinosydnonimine, causes a marked reduction in HDAC activity in epithelial cells in vitro 33. The mechanism whereby tyrosine nitration leads to inactivation of HDAC2 is not yet certain. Nitration of proteins by peroxynitrite is now well documented to alter protein function, such as a reduction in enzymatic activity (fig. 4⇓) 35. It is possible that a tyrosine in the catalytic region of HDAC2 becomes nitrated, thus interfering with its enzymatic efficiency. Furthermore, nitration of proteins appears to make them more susceptible to protein degradation via the proteasome 36, which may explain the marked reduction in HDAC2 protein expression in severe COPD 27.
The effects of oxidative stress are mimicked by cigarette smoke extract and its effects are blocked by the antioxidant N-acetylcysteine 37. This suggests that cigarette smoking may be one of the mechanisms inducing HDAC deficiency in COPD patients. There is considerable evidence for increased oxidative stress in the respiratory tract of patients with COPD, including increased concentrations of ethane and 8-isoprostane, markers of oxidative stress, in exhaled breath, and 4-hydroxynonenal in the peripheral lungs of COPD patients 38–41. These markers are increased to a greater extent in COPD patients than normal smokers and are related to disease severity. There is also evidence for increased markers of oxidative stress in ex-smokers, indicating that oxidative stress is likely to be generated by the ongoing inflammatory process in these patients, as well as active cigarette smoking. Oxidative stress is also increased in patients with severe asthma 42, 43, and this may result in reduced HDAC activity, as seen in COPD patients. Similarly, oxidative stress is increased in interstitial lung disease and cystic fibrosis 44–47.
Virus infections
Adenovirus infection increases the expression of inflammatory genes in epithelial cells in vitro, and this appears to be mediated via the adenoviral E1A protein, which is capable of interacting with HAT-containing coactivators, such as CBP 48. In COPD lungs, there is evidence for latent adenovirus infection and increased expression of E1A protein, so this may be a mechanism for amplification of inflammation in COPD patients 49, 50. Interestingly, adenovirus infection in guinea pigs amplifies the inflammatory response to allergens 51 and is associated with a significant reduction in HDAC activity in the lungs of ovalbumin-sensitised animals 52. Thus, the amplifying effects of adenovirus may be due to an inhibitory effect on HDAC, and it is possible that there is a molecular interaction between HDAC and E1A protein within the nucleus.
CORTICOSTEROIDS AND HISTONE ACETYLATION
Corticosteroids are by far the most effective therapy available for asthma, and inhaled steroids have revolutionised its management since the mid-1990s 53. Inhaled steroids are not only effective in virtually all patients with asthma, but they are also almost free of systemic side-effects. In view of the complexity of inflammation in asthma, it has been difficult to understand how small doses of corticosteroids could be so effective in suppressing this inflammation, as so many inflammatory cells and mediators are involved in the pathophysiology of asthma. It is now becoming clear that the inflammation in asthma is largely driven by the increased expression of multiple inflammatory genes via the activation of proinflammatory transcription factors, such as AP-1 and NF-κB. This results in acetylation of core histones, as discussed earlier. Corticosteroids appear to suppress inflammation in asthma by switching off these inflammatory genes by targeting these transcription factors and their ability to induce histone modifications and chromatin remodelling 54, 55.
Gene activation by corticosteroids
Corticosteroids cross the cell membrane and bind to glucocorticoid receptors (GR) in the cytoplasm, which rapidly translocate to the nucleus, where the activated GR may bind to glucocorticoid recognition elements (GRE) in the promoter region of steroid-sensitive genes. This results in the switching on of certain genes, including several anti-inflammatory genes. The activation of genes by relatively high concentrations of corticosteroids is associated with a selective acetylation of lysine residues 5 and 16 on histone H4, resulting in increased gene transcription (fig. 5⇓) 8, 56. This is a different pattern from the acetylation of the N-terminal tail by inflammatory stimuli, which involves residues 8 and 12, as described previously. This acetylation pattern is correlated with increased secretion of the antiprotease, anti-inflammatory protein secretory leukoprotease inhibitor (SLPI), in response to corticosteroids in an epithelial cell line. Activated GR may bind to coactivator molecules, such as CBP or PCAF, as well as steroid-receptor coactivator-1 and glucocorticoid receptor interacting protein-1, which all possess HAT activity 57, 58.
Corticosteroids may suppress inflammation by increasing the synthesis of anti-inflammatory proteins, such as annexin-1 (lipocortin-1), SLPI, IL-10, the inhibitor of NF-κB, IκB-α, glucocorticoid-induced leucine zipper protein, which inhibits both NF-κB and AP-1 8, 59, and mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase phosphatase-1, which inhibits p38 MAP kinase 60. However, it seems unlikely that the widespread anti-inflammatory actions of corticosteroids could be explained by increased transcription of small numbers of anti-inflammatory genes, particularly as high concentrations of corticosteroids are usually required for these responses, whereas, in clinical practice, corticosteroids are able to suppress inflammation at low concentrations. It is also likely that many of the side-effects of corticosteroids are mediated by gene-activation mechanisms, as mice expressing a mutant form of GR that cannot dimerise and, thus, bind DNA lose the metabolic effects of corticosteroids, while retaining their anti-inflammatory effects, which are largely due to the interaction of GR monomers with NF-κB and associated coactivator proteins 61.
Gene suppression by corticosteroids
Most of the inflammatory genes that are activated in asthma do not have GRE sites in their promoter regions, yet are potently repressed by corticosteroids. It has become clear that most of the anti-inflammatory actions of corticosteroids are due to suppression of the actions of pro-inflammatory transcription factors, such as AP-1 and NF-κB, which regulate the expression of genes that code for many inflammatory proteins, such as cytokines, inflammatory enzymes, adhesion molecules and inflammatory receptors 1, 2. The activated GR can interact directly with activated transcription factors by a protein–protein interaction, which, in many cases, does not alter DNA binding. Thus, treatment of asthmatic patients with high doses of inhaled corticosteroids that suppress airway inflammation is not associated with any reduction in NF-κB binding to DNA 62. This suggests that corticosteroids are more likely to be acting downstream of the binding of pro-inflammatory transcription factors to DNA, and attention has now been focused on their effects on chromatin structure and histone acetylation.
Activated GR may directly bind to CBP or other coactivators to inhibit their HAT activity 8, thus preventing the subsequent histone acetylation and chromatin remodelling. More importantly, particularly at low concentrations that are likely to be relevant therapeutically in asthma treatment, activated GR recruits corepressor proteins, such as HDAC2, to the activated inflammatory gene transcriptional complex, resulting in deacetylation of histones and, thus, a decrease in inflammatory gene transcription (fig. 6⇓) 8. This mechanism can account for the clinical efficacy of corticosteroids in asthma, and GR may recruit HDAC2 to all inflammatory gene promoters that have been activated by NF-κB and other proinflammatory transcription factors. Using a chromatin immunoprecipitation assay, it has been demonstrated that corticosteroids reverse the acetylation of the promoter of inflammatory genes, such as GM-CSF 8. Other genes are not recognised through this mechanism, so corticosteroids do not switch off genes involved in basal cell functions, proliferation or survival. Furthermore, this explains why corticosteroids are relatively safe, as side-effects may be mediated mainly by gene activation mechanisms, which require higher concentrations of corticosteroids, rather than via gene repression and HDAC recruitment.
CORTICOSTEROID RESISTANCE
Although corticosteroids are highly effective in the control of asthma and other chronic inflammatory or immune diseases, a small proportion of patients fail to respond even to high doses of oral corticosteroids 63–65, and patients with COPD are largely unresponsive to corticosteroids 66. The recent recognition that histone acetylation and deacetylation are important in the mechanisms of action of corticosteroids has provided novel molecular insights into molecular mechanisms of corticosteroid resistance.
Asthma
Corticosteroid-resistant patients, although uncommon, present considerable management problems 55, 65. It is likely that there is a spectrum of steroid responsiveness, with the rare resistance at one end, but a relative resistance is seen in patients who require high doses of inhaled and oral steroids (steroid-dependent asthma). Biopsy studies have demonstrated the typical eosinophilic inflammation of asthma in these patients.
There may be several mechanisms for resistance to the effects of corticosteroids, and these may differ between patients. It has been found that peripheral blood mononuclear cells from asthmatic patients who are steroid dependent or resistant show reduced suppression of cytokine release, as previously documented 67–69, but also show a reduction in acetylation of histone H4 in the nucleus following treatment of cells with a high concentration of dexamethasone (1 μM). In one group of patients, nuclear localisation of GR in response to a high concentration of corticosteroids is impaired, and this accounts for the reduced histone acetylation, since there is a direct correlation between the degree of histone acetylation and the GR nuclear localisation 70. This may be a result of GR nitrosylation leading to reduced dissociation of GR from heat shock protein-90 71. However, in another group of patients, the defect in acetylation of histone acetylation is found, despite normal nuclear localisation of GR. This may be a result of GR phosphorylation within the nucleus due to the activation of p38 MAP kinase, which may be activated by a combination of IL-2 and IL-4 or by IL-13 alone 72, resulting in a failure to recruit distinct coactivator(s) (fig. 7⇓). This may result in the failure of GR to transactivate steroid-responsive genes 73. In this group of patients, specific acetylation of lysine 5 by corticosteroids is defective 70. Presumably, this means that corticosteroids are not able to activate certain genes that are critical to the anti-inflammatory action of high doses of corticosteroids. Whether this is a genetic defect is not yet known.
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
Although inhaled corticosteroids are highly effective in asthma, they provide relatively little therapeutic benefit in COPD, despite the fact that active airway and lung inflammation are present. This may reflect the fact that the inflammation in COPD is not suppressed by corticosteroids, with no reduction in inflammatory cells, cytokines or proteases in induced sputum, even with oral corticosteroids 74–76. Furthermore, histological analysis of the peripheral airways of patients with severe COPD shows an intense inflammatory response, despite treatment with high doses of inhaled corticosteroids 28. There is some evidence that an active steroid-resistance mechanism exists in COPD, as corticosteroids fail to inhibit cytokines (such as IL-8 and TNF-α) that they normally suppress 74, 75. In vitro studies show that cytokine release from the alveolar macrophages of COPD patients is markedly resistant to the anti-inflammatory effects of corticosteroids compared with cells from normal smokers, and, in turn, these are more resistant than alveolar macrophages from nonsmokers 77, 78. This lack of response to corticosteroids may be explained, at least in part, by an inhibitory effect of cigarette smoking and oxidative stress on HDAC function, thus interfering with the critical anti-inflammatory action of corticosteroids 30. Indeed, there is a correlation between HDAC activity and the suppressive effects of a corticosteroid on cytokine release. It is likely that oxidative and nitrative stress in COPD specifically impairs HDAC2, as discussed earlier, resulting in corticosteroid resistance (fig. 8⇓) 79. Although this is seen in all stages of COPD, it is most marked in the patients with the most severe disease 27. Even in patients with COPD who have stopped smoking, the steroid resistance persists 74, 75, and these patients are known to have continuing oxidative stress 39.
As oxidative stress is also increased in patients with severe asthma, and during exacerbations 43, 80, 81, a reduction in HDAC may also account for the reduced responsiveness to corticosteroids in these patients.
Smoking asthmatics
As discussed previously, asthmatic patients who smoke have more severe disease and are also resistant to the anti-inflammatory effects of corticosteroids 82, 83. A plausible explanation for this steroid resistance is the combined effect of asthma and cigarette smoking on HDAC, resulting in a marked reduction comparable with that seen in COPD patients, and this is confirmed by the current authors' preliminary data 25.
Virus infections
As discussed earlier, adenovirus infection in guinea pigs appears to amplify the inflammatory response, but also induces corticosteroid resistance 84. The steroid resistance may be explained by the reduction in HDAC activity of virus-infected animals 52. Therefore, the latent adenovirus infections described in COPD may contribute to the reduction in HDAC activity described in the peripheral lungs of these patients. Persistence of adenovirus infections has also been implicated in steroid resistance in children with asthma 85. Other viral infections may also impair the action of HDAC2 and, thus, induce steroid resistance, but this still needs to be explored.
EFFECTS OF DRUGS
Corticosteroids
As indicated previously, corticosteroids inhibit HAT activity and enable HDAC2 to be recruited to NF-κB, thus switching off activated inflammatory genes. These interactions involve direct or indirect binding of GR with CBP and HDAC 56. This suggests that it may be possible to develop dissociated steroids that discriminate between the DNA binding of GR, which requires receptor dimerisation, and the interaction with inflammatory gene complexes, which does not require this. Several dissociated steroids are in development with a view to reducing systemic side-effects, which are largely due to DNA binding, and anti-inflammatory effects, which are due to protein–protein interaction 88. Long-term treatment with high concentrations of corticosteroids can also lead to enhanced HDAC2 expression 8.
Theophylline
Theophylline has been used to treat asthma for many years, but its mechanism of action has been difficult to elucidate. Originally, theophylline was used as a bronchodilator, and it relaxes airway smooth muscle by inhibiting phosphodiesterases (PDE). There is accumulating evidence that theophylline has anti-inflammatory effects at lower doses, but it is unlikely that these are mediated by PDE inhibition, as the inhibition of these enzymes is trivial at low plasma concentrations that are clinically effective 89. It has been shown that the anti-inflammatory effects of theophylline may be mediated via activation of HDAC, and that this effect is independent of PDE inhibition 90. Low doses of theophylline significantly increase HDAC activity in bronchial biopsies from asthmatic patients, and the increase in HDAC activity is correlated with the reduction in airway eosinophils 90. Theophylline is active in low concentrations (10−7–10−5 M) on nuclear extracts, indicating that it works within the nucleus and does not require surface receptors. This appears to be a novel mechanism of theophylline and is not mimicked by PDE inhibitors or by adenosine receptor antagonists 90. This is of particular importance, as the major side-effects of theophylline are mediated via PDE inhibition (nausea, headaches) and adenosine receptor (A1) antagonism (cardiac arrhythmias, seizures). Theophylline appears to preferentially activate class I HDACs, including HDAC2 15. However, the exact mechanism whereby theophylline activates HDAC is not yet certain, but is likely to be through signal transduction pathways (probably kinases) that regulate HDAC activity. The effects of theophylline on HDAC appear to be enhanced under conditions of oxidative stress, making it more efficient as a regulator of inflammatory genes 15. This means that the dose of theophylline does not have to be increased as the disease becomes more severe, as the increase in oxidative stress would increase drug activity.
This predicts that theophylline will enhance the anti-inflammatory actions of corticosteroids, as the HDAC2 recruited to the activated p65 complex at the promoters of inflammatory genes will be more effective at switching off these genes. Indeed, therapeutic concentrations of theophylline markedly potentiate the anti-inflammatory effects of corticosteroids in vitro 90. This may explain why adding a low dose of theophylline is more effective than increasing the dose of inhaled corticosteroids in patients who are not controlled adequately 91–93.
In COPD macrophages, HDAC activity is reduced and associated with increased inflammatory gene expression and steroid resistance. Low concentrations of theophylline are able to restore HDAC activity in these macrophages, and this results in increased steroid responsiveness in these cells 15. These in vitro studies suggest that low doses of theophylline may have the capacity to reverse steroid resistance in COPD patients, and trials are now underway to test this idea. Indeed, in COPD patients, low-dose theophylline has an anti-inflammatory effect, in contrast with the lack of response to high doses of corticosteroids 94, and it is possible that there is an interaction between theophylline and endogenous cortisol. Furthermore, since similar mechanisms of steroid resistance may also apply in severe asthma and smoking asthmatics, theophylline may also be useful in these patients, and this may explain why theophylline appears to be useful as an add-on therapy to inhaled steroids, particularly in patients with severe disease 95.
THERAPEUTIC IMPLICATIONS AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS
The recognition that histone acetylation status regulates inflammatory gene expression has improved the understanding of chronic inflammatory lung diseases, and the discovery that oxidative and nitrative stress can lead to amplified inflammation and corticosteroid resistance in COPD patients, and probably severe asthma and smoking asthmatic patients, may have important clinical implications.
Novel corticosteroids
Currently available inhaled corticosteroids are absorbed from the lungs into the systemic circulation, and, therefore, at high doses, they have systemic effects. Therefore, there is a search for safer steroids with reduced systemic effects. The major task in developing these drugs is to dissociate the anti-inflammatory effects from the endocrine actions that are associated with side-effects. This may be possible, since most of the anti-inflammatory actions of corticosteroids are mediated by gene repression as a consequence of histone deacetylation following the recruitment of HDAC2 to activated inflammatory genes. By contrast, the endocrine and metabolic effects of steroids that are responsible for the systemic side-effects of corticosteroids are likely to be mediated predominantly via genomic actions of corticosteroids involving DNA binding and histone acetylation. A separation of transactivation and transrepression has been demonstrated using reporter gene constructs in transfected cells, using selective mutations of the glucocorticoid receptor 96, 97. In addition, in mice with GR that do not dimerise and cannot bind to DNA, there is no transactivation, but transrepression appears to be normal 61, 98. The topical steroids currently used in asthma therapy, such as fluticasone propionate and budesonide, appear to have more potent transrepression than transactivation effects, which may account for their selection as potent anti-inflammatory agents 99. Novel steroids have been described, in which there is potent transrepression with relatively little transactivation, which may have a greater therapeutic ratio 88. The recent resolution of the crystal structure for the ligand-binding domain of GR may help in the better design of dissociated steroids 100.
Nonsteroidal steroids
Now that the molecular mechanisms of corticosteroids have been elucidated, this raises the possibility that novel nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory treatments might be developed, which mimic the actions of corticosteroids on inflammatory gene regulation. The mechanism by which GR interacts with HAT and HDAC is not yet fully understood. It is likely that several other interacting proteins may be involved, which might be targets for the development of new drugs.
New theophylline derivatives
Other means of activating HDACs may have therapeutic potential, and theophylline represents the first drug that has been shown to have this property, resulting in the marked potentiation of the anti-inflammatory effects of corticosteroids. It may be possible to discover other drugs in this class, which could form the basis of a new class of anti-inflammatory drugs without the side-effects that limit the use of theophylline 89. While low concentrations of theophylline activate HDAC, higher concentrations (>10−4 M) inhibit HDAC. This may be an indication that theophylline is a partial agonist, and a search for fuller agonists might lead to more effective HDAC activators. Novel HDAC activators might be discovered by high throughput screening using HDAC activation, particularly under conditions of oxidative stress. Kinases or phosphatases that regulate HDAC2 activity in a similar manner to theophylline may also prove to be effective add-on therapies to corticosteroids.
Many of the anti-inflammatory effects of corticosteroids appear to be mediated via inhibition of the transcriptional effects of NF-κB, and, currently, small molecule inhibitors of IκB kinase (IKK)2, which activate NF-κB, are in development. However, corticosteroids have additional effects, so it is not certain whether IKK2 inhibitors will parallel the clinical effectiveness of corticosteroids, and they may have side-effects, such as increased susceptibility to infections.
Treatments that bypass or reverse steroid resistance are also needed. p38 MAP kinase inhibitors might reduce steroid resistance and act as anti-inflammatory treatments in patients with some forms of steroid-resistant asthma, but would not be expected to benefit the patients with the form of steroid resistance associated with a defect in acetylation of lysine 5 on histone H4. In COPD patients, there is an urgent need to develop novel anti-inflammatory treatments or to reverse corticosteroid resistance 101. Low-dose theophylline, by increasing HDAC activity, may also reverse corticosteroid resistance in patients with COPD 102.
Antioxidants
Since oxidative stress is a mechanism that may impair HDAC activity and expression, as seen in COPD and severe asthma, antioxidants have the potential to increase HDAC activity, switch off inflammatory genes and restore steroid responsiveness 32. Currently available antioxidants, such as N-acetyl cysteine, are not very potent and may not sufficiently reduce oxidative stress in the lungs. New, more potent antioxidants are needed in the future, and there are several drugs in development, including new glutathione and superoxide dismutase analogues 103.
Inducible nitric oxide synthase inhibitors
Peroxynitrite, formed by an interaction of superoxide anions and nitric oxide (NO), may lead to a reduction in HDAC activity and expression. NO is derived predominantly from inducible NO synthase (iNOS), and this suggests that inhibition of iNOS may block the formation of peroxynitrite and reverse steroid resistance. Several selective iNOS inhibitors are now in development, and one of these has been shown to markedly reduce NO formation in asthmatic patients 104.
Molecular genetics
It is likely that gene polymorphisms predispose to the development of COPD in certain smokers and severe asthma, but the genes for COPD susceptibility and asthma severity are not well defined. Little is known about the single nucleotide polymorphisms of HATs and HDACs, but this is likely to be a fruitful area for research in the future.
Future research
Research into the role of histone acetylation and deacetylation in disease is only in its infancy. Most research in this field has focused on cancer and cell differentiation, but this review highlights its applicability to understanding chronic inflammatory diseases and the mechanism of action of currently available therapies. Histone acetylation and deacetylation are influenced by many factors (table 1⇓). New techniques, such as interference RNA, can knock down specific HATs and HDACs in order to study their role and interaction in pulmonary cells. This approach may also be applicable in animal models in vivo. In mice, selective deletion and transgenic expression of specific HAT and HDAC genes is also likely to be very informative, particularly when conditional knockouts in selective cell types are developed. There are currently few selective drugs available, but nonselective HDAC inhibitors, such as TSA and suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid, are already being used to study global HDAC reduction. More selective inhibitors are now emerging and may be useful as exploratory tools 105. Theophylline is the only HDAC activator to be identified so far, but the molecular mechanisms of this action remain to be determined. Understanding the molecular pathways whereby theophylline activates HDACs may lead to novel therapeutic approaches for treating inflammatory diseases in the future.
An important emerging area of research is how different modifications of core histones, such as phosphorylation, methylation and ubiquitination, interact with acetylation to determine the specificity and kinetics of specific gene expression. This may lead to a better understanding of how genes are differentially regulated and how more specific gene regulation might be produced in the future. A further new area of research concerns the recognition that HATs and HDACs may modify proteins other than histones, including transcription factors and key regulatory proteins 106–108. This is likely to be of major importance in disease and extends the perspective of HATs and HDACs.
The study of histone acetylation and deacetylation is a rapidly growing area of research, particularly as new technologies are developed. This research has already led to important new insights into the basic mechanisms involved in asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. The implications for future research into pulmonary diseases are likely to be profound.
- Received October 13, 2004.
- Accepted November 30, 2004.
- © ERS Journals Ltd