The AGE-RAGE Axis and the Pathophysiology of Multimorbidity in COPD

J Clin Med. 2023 May 9;12(10):3366. doi: 10.3390/jcm12103366.

Abstract

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a disease of the airways and lungs due to an enhanced inflammatory response, commonly caused by cigarette smoking. Patients with COPD are often multimorbid, as they commonly suffer from multiple chronic (inflammatory) conditions. This intensifies the burden of individual diseases, negatively affects quality of life, and complicates disease management. COPD and comorbidities share genetic and lifestyle-related risk factors and pathobiological mechanisms, including chronic inflammation and oxidative stress. The receptor for advanced glycation end products (RAGE) is an important driver of chronic inflammation. Advanced glycation end products (AGEs) are RAGE ligands that accumulate due to aging, inflammation, oxidative stress, and carbohydrate metabolism. AGEs cause further inflammation and oxidative stress through RAGE, but also through RAGE-independent mechanisms. This review describes the complexity of RAGE signaling and the causes of AGE accumulation, followed by a comprehensive overview of alterations reported on AGEs and RAGE in COPD and in important co-morbidities. Furthermore, it describes the mechanisms by which AGEs and RAGE contribute to the pathophysiology of individual disease conditions and how they execute crosstalk between organ systems. A section on therapeutic strategies that target AGEs and RAGE and could alleviate patients from multimorbid conditions using single therapeutics concludes this review.

Keywords: COPD; advanced glycation end products; aging; chronic inflammation; multimorbidity; receptor for advanced glycation end products.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

N.L.R. reports funding from the Dutch Lung Foundation (5.1.17.166 and 6.1.16.088). L.E.G.W.V. reports funding support from The Family Kamprad Foundation (20190024), The Swedish Heart and Lung Foundation (20200150) and the Swedish Government and Country Council grant (ALFGBG-824371).