HSP70 is a chaperone for IL-33 activity in chronic airway disease.
Pubmed ID: 40553562
Pubmed Central ID: PMC12333954
Journal: JCI insight
Publication Date: June 24, 2025
MeSH Terms: Humans, Asthma, Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive, Epithelial Cells, Protein Isoforms, Interleukin-33, HSP70 Heat-Shock Proteins
Grants: UL1 TR002345, K08 HL121168, T32 HL007317, R01 HL110906, R01 HL152245, R01 HL170198, P30 CA091842, P30 DK020579
Authors: Cohen LS, Osorio OA, Raphael HE, Kluender CE, Hassan GF, Steinberg DF, Katz-Kiriakos E, Payne MD, Luo EM, Hicks JL, Byers DE, Alexander-Brett J
Cite As: Osorio OA, Raphael HE, Kluender CE, Hassan GF, Cohen LS, Steinberg DF, Katz-Kiriakos E, Payne MD, Luo EM, Hicks JL, Byers DE, Alexander-Brett J. HSP70 is a chaperone for IL-33 activity in chronic airway disease. JCI Insight 2025 Jun 24;10. (15). doi: 10.1172/jci.insight.193640. eCollection 2025 Aug 8.
Studies:
Abstract
IL-33 is a key driver of type 2 inflammation and implicated in pathology of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and asthma. However, the mechanism for IL-33 secretion and regulation in the context of chronic airway disease is poorly understood. We previously reported an airway disease-associated isoform IL-33Δ34 that escapes nuclear sequestration and is tonically secreted from epithelial cells. Here, we describe how this IL-33Δ34 isoform interacts with HSP70 within cells and is targeted to secretory organelles through coordinated binding to phosphatidylserine (PS) and delivered to compartments for unconventional protein secretion (CUPS). Once secreted, extracellular HSP70 (eHSP70) in complex with IL-33Δ34 stabilizes the cytokine by inhibiting oxidation and degradation, which results in enhanced IL-33Δ34-receptor binding and activity. We further find evidence that IL-33 along with mediators of the proteostasis network HSP70, HSP90, and the Chaperonin Containing TCP1 (CCT) complex are dysregulated in human chronic airway disease. This phenomenon is reflected in the differential extracellular vesicle (EV) proteome in bronchial wash from COPD and asthma samples, which could mark disease activity and potentiate IL-33 function. This study confirms proteostasis intermediates, chiefly HSP70, as chaperones for noncanonical IL-33 secretion and activity that may be amenable for therapeutic targeting in the chronic airway diseases COPD and asthma.