Starving a Cell Promotes Airway Smooth Muscle Relaxation: Inhibition of Glycolysis Attenuates Excitation–Contraction Coupling

Bronchomotor tone modulated by airway smooth muscle shortening represents a key mechanism that increases airway resistance in asthma. Altered glucose metabolism in inflammatory and airway structural cells is associated with asthma. Although these observations suggest a causal link between glucose metabolism and airway hyperresponsiveness, the mechanisms are unclear. We hypothesized that glycolysis modulates excitation–contraction coupling in human airway smooth muscle (HASM) cells. Cultured HASM cells from human lung donors were subject to metabolic screenings using Seahorse XF cell assay. HASM cell monolayers were treated with vehicle or PFK15 (1-(Pyridin-4-yl)-3-(quinolin-2-yl)prop-2-en-1-one), an inhibitor of PFKFB3 (PFK-1,6-phosphofructo-2-kinase/fructose-2,6-biphosphatase 3) that generates an allosteric activator for glycolysis rate-limiting enzyme PFK1 (phosphofructokinase 1), for 5–240 minutes, and baseline and agonist-induced phosphorylation of MLC (myosin light chain), MYPT1 (myosin phosphatase regulatory subunit 1), Akt, RhoA, and cytosolic Ca2+ were determined. PFK15 effects on metabolic activity and contractile agonist–induced bronchoconstriction were determined in human precision-cut lung slices. Inhibition of glycolysis attenuated carbachol-induced excitation–contraction coupling in HASM cells. ATP production and bronchodilator-induced cAMP concentrations were also attenuated by glycolysis inhibition in HASM cells. In human small airways, glycolysis inhibition decreased mitochondrial respiration and ATP production and attenuated carbachol-induced bronchoconstriction. The findings suggest that energy depletion resulting from glycolysis inhibition is a novel strategy for ameliorating HASM cell shortening and bronchoprotection of human small airways.

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