Airway surface liquid acidification initiates host defense abnormalities in Cystic Fibrosis.
Simonin. Juliette J; Bille. Emmanuelle E; Crambert. Gilles G; Noel. Sabrina S; Dreano. Elise E; Edwards. Aurélie A; Hatton. Aurélie A; Pranke. Iwona I; Villeret. Bérengère B; Cottart. Charles-Henry CH; Vrel. Jean-Patrick JP; Urbach. Valérie V; Baatallah. Nesrine N; Hinzpeter. Alexandre A; Golec. Anita A; Touqui. Lhousseine L; Nassif. Xavier X; Galietta. Luis J V LJV; Planelles. Gabrielle G; Sallenave. Jean-Michel JM; Edelman. Aleksander A; Sermet-Gaudelus. Isabelle I
Key Findings
- CF airway surface liquid (ASL) is significantly more acidic than normal due to reduced bicarbonate secretion (CFTR & pendrin) and ongoing proton secretion (ATP12A).
- Acidic ASL impairs clearance of Staphylococcus aureus; normalizing pH restores bacterial killing.
- Antimicrobial peptides LL‑37 and hBD1 lose effectiveness at low pH, but regain activity when ASL pH is corrected.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers interested in lung health, strategies that raise airway pH—such as inhaled or nasal bicarbonate solutions, alkalizing diets, or safe modulators of pendrin/ATP12A—may enhance innate defense. Remember that the potency of LL‑37 is pH‑dependent, so maintaining a less acidic airway environment could improve its natural antimicrobial action.
Summary
The study found that the liquid lining the airways of people with cystic fibrosis is too acidic, which weakens the natural ability to kill Staphylococcus aureus. Raising the pH (making it less acidic) restores the killing power of the airway and improves the activity of natural antimicrobial peptides like LL‑37. Targeting the proteins that control acid‑base balance in the airway (pendrin and ATP12A) could be a way to normalize pH and boost lung defenses.
Abstract
Cystic fibrosis (CF) is caused by defective Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conductance Regulator (CFTR) protein. Morbidity is mainly due to early airway infection. We hypothesized that S. aureus clearance during the first hours of infection was impaired in CF human Airway Surface Liquid (ASL) because of a lowered pH. The ASL pH of human bronchial epithelial cell lines and primary respiratory cells from healthy controls (WT) and patients with CF was measured with a pH microelectrode. The antimicrobial capacity of airway cells was studied after S. aureus apical infection by counting surviving bacteria. ASL was significantly more acidic in CF than in WT respiratory cells. This was consistent with a defect in bicarbonate secretion involving CFTR and SLC26A4 (pendrin) and a persistent proton secretion by ATP12A. ASL demonstrated a defect in S. aureus clearance which was improved by pH normalization. Pendrin inhibition in WT airways recapitulated the CF airway defect and increased S. aureus proliferation. ATP12A inhibition by ouabain decreased bacterial proliferation. Antimicrobial peptides LL-37 and hBD1 demonstrated a pH-dependent activity. Normalizing ASL pH might improve innate airway defense in newborns with CF during onset of S. aureus infection. Pendrin activation and ATP12A inhibition could represent novel therapeutic strategies to normalize pH in CF airways.
Study Information
pubmed
2019
2019-04-24T00:00:00.000Z
10.1038/s41598-019-42751-4
68
41