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1.
Amiloride-sensitive Na(+) channels, present in fetal and adult alveolar epithelial type II (ATII) cells, play a critical role in the reabsorption of fetal fluid shortly after birth and in limiting the extent of alveolar edema across the adult lung. Because of the difficulty in isolating and culturing ATII cells, there is considerable interest in characterizing the properties of ion channels and their response to injury of ATII cell-like cell lines such as A549 that derive from a human alveolar cell carcinoma. A549 cells were shown to contain alpha-, beta-, and gamma-epithelial Na(+) channel mRNAs. In the whole cell mode of the patch-clamp technique (bath, 145 mM Na(+); pipette, 145 mM K(+)), A549 cells exhibited inward Na(+) currents reversibly inhibited by amiloride, with an inhibition constant of 0.83 microM. Ion substitution studies showed that these channels were moderately selective for Na(+) (Na(+)-to-K(+) permeability ratio = 6:1). Inward Na(+) currents were activated by forskolin (10 microM) and inhibited by nitric oxide (300 nM) and cGMP. Recordings in cell-attached mode revealed the presence of an amiloride-sensitive Na(+) channel with a unitary conductance of 8.6 +/- 0.04 (SE) pS. Channel activity was increased by forskolin and decreased by nitric oxide and the cGMP analog 8-bromo-cGMP. These data demonstrate that A549 cells contain amiloride-sensitive Na(+) channels with biophysical properties similar to those of ATII cells.  相似文献   

2.
Hypoxia inhibits Na and lung fluid reabsorption, which contributes to the formation of pulmonary edema. We tested whether dexamethasone prevents hypoxia-induced inhibition of reabsorption by stimulation of alveolar Na transport. Fluid reabsorption, transport activity, and expression of Na transporters were measured in hypoxia-exposed rats and in primary alveolar type II (ATII) cells. Rats were treated with dexamethasone (DEX; 2 mg/kg) on 3 consecutive days and exposed to 10% O(2) on the 2nd and 3rd day of treatment to measure hypoxia effects on reabsorption of fluid instilled into lungs. ATII cells were treated with DEX (1 muM) for 3 days before exposure to hypoxia (1.5% O(2)). In normoxic rats, DEX induced a twofold increase in alveolar fluid clearance. Hypoxia decreased reabsorption (-30%) by decreasing its amiloride-sensitive component; pretreatment with DEX prevented the hypoxia-induced inhibition. DEX increased short-circuit currents (ISC) of ATII monolayers in normoxia and blunted hypoxic transport inhibition by increasing the capacity of Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase and epithelial Na(+) channels (ENaC) and amiloride-sensitive ISC. DEX slightly increased the mRNA of alpha- and gamma-ENaC in whole rat lung. In ATII cells from DEX-treated rats, mRNA of alpha(1)-Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase and alpha-ENaC increased in normoxia and hypoxia, and gamma-ENaC was increased in normoxia only. DEX stimulated the mRNA expression of alpha(1)-Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase and alpha-, beta-, and gamma-ENaC of A549 cells in normoxia and hypoxia (1.5% O(2)) when DEX treatment was begun before or during hypoxic exposure. These results indicate that DEX prevents inhibition of alveolar reabsorption by hypoxia and stimulates the expression of Na transporters even when it is applied in hypoxia.  相似文献   

3.
Fluid-free alveolar space is critical for normal gas exchange. Influenza virus alters fluid transport across respiratory epithelia producing rhinorrhea, middle ear effusions, and alveolar flooding. However, the mechanism of fluid retention remains unclear. We investigated influenza virus strain A/PR/8/34, which can attach and enter mammalian cells but is incapable of viral replication and productive infection in mammalian epithelia, on epithelial sodium channels (ENaC) in rat alveolar type II (ATII) cells. In parallel, we determined the effects of virus on amiloride-sensitive (i.e., ENaC-mediated) fluid clearance in rat lungs in vivo. Although influenza virus did not change the inulin permeability of ATII monolayers, it rapidly reduced the net volume transport across monolayers. Virus reduced the open probability of single ENaC channels in apical cell-attached patches. U-73122, a phospholipase C (PLC) inhibitor, and PP2, a Src inhibitor, blocked the effect of virus on ENaC. GF-109203X, a protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitor, also blocked the effect, suggesting a PKC-mediated mechanism. In parallel, intratracheal administration of influenza virus produced a rapid inhibition of amiloride-sensitive (i.e., ENaC-dependent) lung fluid transport. Together, these results show that influenza virus rapidly inhibits ENaC in ATII cells via a PLC- and Src-mediated activation of PKC but does not increase epithelial permeability in this same rapid time course. We speculate that this rapid inhibition of ENaC and formation of edema when the virus first attaches to the alveolar epithelium might facilitate subsequent influenza infection and may exacerbate influenza-mediated alveolar flooding that can lead to acute respiratory failure and death.  相似文献   

4.
Transepithelial transport of Na(+) across the lung epithelium via amiloride-sensitive Na(+) channels (ENaC) regulates fluid volume in the lung lumen. Activators of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK), the adenosine monophosphate mimetic AICAR, and the biguanide metformin decreased amiloride-sensitive apical Na(+) conductance (G(Na+)) in human H441 airway epithelial cell monolayers. Cell-attached patch-clamp recordings identified two distinct constitutively active cation channels in the apical membrane that were likely to contribute to G(Na+): a 5-pS highly Na(+) selective ENaC-like channel (HSC) and an 18-pS nonselective cation channel (NSC). Substituting NaCl with NMDG-Cl in the patch pipette solution shifted the reversal potentials of HSC and NSC, respectively, from +23 mV to -38 mV and 0 mV to -35 mV. Amiloride at 1 microM inhibited HSC activity and 56% of short-circuit current (I(sc)), whereas 10 microM amiloride partially reduced NSC activity and inhibited a further 30% of I(sc). Neither conductance was associated with CNG channels as there was no effect of 10 microM pimoside on I(sc), HSC, or NSC activity, and 8-bromo-cGMP (0.3-0.1 mM) did not induce or increase HSC or NSC activity. Pretreatment of H441 monolayers with 2 mM AICAR inhibited HSC/NSC activity by 90%, and this effect was reversed by the AMPK inhibitor Compound C. All three ENaC proteins were identified in the apical membrane of H441 monolayers, but no change in their abundance was detected after treatment with AICAR. In conclusion, activation of AMPK with AICAR in H441 cell monolayers is associated with inhibition of two distinct amiloride-sensitive Na(+)-permeable channels by a mechanism that likely reduces channel open probability.  相似文献   

5.
The ability of the distal lung epithelia to actively transport Na+, with Cl- and water following, from the alveolar spaces inversely correlates with morbidity and mortality of infants, children, and adults with alveolar pulmonary edema. It is now recognized, in contrast to many other Na+ transporting epithelia, that at least half of this active transport is not sensitive to amiloride, which inhibits the epithelial Na+ channel. This paper reviews amiloride-insensitive Na+ and fluid transport in the mammalian distal lung unit under basal conditions and speculates on potential explanations for this amiloride-insensitive transport. It also provides new information, using primary cultures of rat fetal distal lung epithelia and alveolar type II cells grown under submersion and air-liquid interface culture conditions, regarding putative blockers of this transport.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Edema fluid (EF) increases epithelial Na(+) transport by rat fetal distal lung epithelia (FDLE) and induces net lung fluid absorption in fetal mouse lung explants [Rafii B, Gillie DJ, Sulowski C, Hannam V, Cheung T, Otulakowski G, Barker PM, O'Brodovich H. J Physiol (Lond) 544: 537-548, 2002]. We now show that EF increases fluid absorption across monolayers of rat FDLE in a dose-dependent manner. To study the role of subunits of the epithelial Na(+) channel (ENaC) in the phenomena, we cultured explants from the distal lungs of 16-day gestational age wild-type (WT) or alpha-, beta-, or gamma-ENaC knockout or heterozygote (HT) mice. WT explants cultured in media continuously expanded over time as a result of net fluid secretion. In contrast, when explants were exposed to EF for 24 h, net fluid absorption occurred. EF-exposed explants had normal histology, but marked changes were seen after Triton X-100 or staurosporine exposure. Transmission electron microscopy showed EF promoted lamellar body formation and abundant surfactant in the explants' lumens. EF-induced changes in explant size were similar in alpha-ENaC knockout, WT, and HT littermate fetal lung explants (P > 0.05). In contrast, EF's effect was attenuated in beta- and gamma-ENaC knockouts (P < 0.05) vs. WT and HT littermate fetal lung explants. EF exposure slightly decreased or had no effect on mRNA levels for alpha-ENaC in various mouse genotypes but decreased expression of beta- and gamma-ENaC subunit mRNAs (P < 0.01) across all genotype groups. We conclude that beta- and gamma-, but not alpha-, ENaC subunits are essential for EF to exert its maximal effect on net fluid absorption by distal lung epithelia.  相似文献   

8.
Hypoxia has been reported to inhibit activity and expression of ion transporters of alveolar epithelial cells. This study extended those observations by investigating the mechanisms underlying inhibition of active Na transport across primary cultured adult rat alveolar epithelial cell monolayers grown on polycarbonate filters. Cell monolayers were exposed to normoxia and hypoxia (1.5% and 5% O(2), 5% CO(2)), and resultant changes in bioelectric properties [i.e., short-circuit current (I(sc)) and transepithelial resistance (R(t))] were measured in Ussing chambers. Results showed that I(sc) decreased with duration of exposure to hypoxia, while relatively little change was observed for R(t). In normoxia, amiloride inhibited approximately 70% of I(sc). The amiloride-sensitive portion of I(sc) decreased over time of exposure to hypoxia, whereas the magnitude of the amiloride-insensitive portion of I(sc) was not affected. Na pump capacity measured after permeabilization of the apical plasma membrane with amphotericin B decreased in monolayers exposed to 1.5% O(2) for 24 h, as did the capacity of amiloride-sensitive Na uptake measured after imposing an apical to basolateral Na gradient and permeabilization of the basolateral membrane. These results demonstrate that exposure to hypoxia inhibits alveolar epithelial Na reabsorption by reducing the rates of both apical amiloride-sensitive Na entry and basolateral Na extrusion.  相似文献   

9.
The extent to which endogenously generated nitric oxide alters Na(+) transport across the mammalian alveolar epithelium in vivo has not been documented. Herein we measured alveolar fluid clearance and nasal potential differences in mice lacking the inducible form of nitric oxide synthase [iNOS; iNOS(-/-)] and their corresponding wild-type controls [iNOS(+/+)]. Alveolar fluid clearance values in iNOS(+/+) and iNOS(-/-) anesthetized mice with normal oxygenation and acid-base balance were ~30% of instilled fluid/30 min. In both groups of mice, fluid absorption was dependent on vectorial Na(+) movement. Amiloride (1.5 mM) decreased alveolar fluid clearance in iNOS(+/+) mice by 61%, whereas forskolin (50 microM) increased alveolar fluid clearance by 55% by stimulating amiloride-insensitive pathways. Neither agent altered alveolar fluid clearance in iNOS(-/-) mice. Hyperoxia upregulated iNOS expression in iNOS(+/+) mice and decreased their amiloride-sensitive component of alveolar fluid clearance but had no effect on the corresponding values in iNOS(-/-) mice. Nasal potential difference measurements were consistent with alveolar fluid clearance in that both groups of mice had similar baseline values, which were amiloride sensitive in the iNOS(+/+) but not in the iNOS(-/-) mice. These data suggest that nitric oxide produced by iNOS under basal conditions plays an important role in regulating amiloride-sensitive Na(+) channels in alveolar and airway epithelia.  相似文献   

10.
Acute lung injury (ALI) is characterized by the flooding of the alveolar airspaces with protein-rich edema fluid and diffuse alveolar damage. We have previously reported that transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1) is a critical mediator of ALI after intratracheal administration of bleomycin or Escherichia coli endotoxin, at least in part due to effects on lung endothelial and alveolar epithelial permeability. In the present study, we hypothesized that TGF-beta1 would also decrease vectorial ion and water transport across the distal lung epithelium. Therefore, we studied the effect of active TGF-beta1 on 22Na+ uptake across monolayers of primary rat and human alveolar type II (ATII) cells. TGF-beta1 significantly reduced the amiloride-sensitive fraction of 22Na+ uptake and fluid transport across monolayers of both rat and human ATII cells. TGF-beta1 also significantly decreased alphaENaC mRNA and protein expression and inhibited expression of a luciferase reporter downstream of the alphaENaC promoter in lung epithelial cells. The inhibitory effect of TGF-beta1 on sodium uptake and alphaENaC expression in ATII cells was mediated by activation of the MAPK, ERK1/2. Consistent with the in vitro results, TGF-beta1 inhibited the amiloride-sensitive fraction of the distal airway epithelial fluid transport in an in vivo rat model at a dose that was not associated with any change in epithelial protein permeability. These data indicate that increased TGF-beta1 activity in the distal airspaces during ALI promotes alveolar edema by reducing distal airway epithelial sodium and fluid clearance. This reduction in sodium and fluid transport is attributable in large part to a reduction in apical membrane alphaENaC expression mediated through an ERK1/2-dependent inhibition of the alphaENaC promoter activity.  相似文献   

11.
Existing evidence supports the presence of active transport of Na(+) across the mammalian alveolar epithelium and its upregulation by agents that increase cytoplasmic cAMP levels. However, there is controversy regarding the mechanisms responsible for this upregulation. Herein we present the results of various patch-clamp studies indicating the presence of 25- to 27-pS, amiloride-sensitive, moderately selective Na(+) channels (Na(+)-to-K(+) permeability ratio = 7:1) located on the apical membranes of rat alveolar type II (ATII) cells maintained in primary culture. The addition of terbutaline to the bath solution increased the open probability of single channels present in cell-attached patches of ATII cells without affecting their conductance. A similar increase in open probability was seen after the addition of protein kinase A, ATP, and Mg(2+) to the cytoplasmic side of inside-out patches. Measurement of short-circuit currents across confluent monolayers of rat or rabbit ATII cells indicates that terbutaline and 8-(4-chlorophenylthio)-cAMP increase vectorial Na(+) transport and activate Cl(-) channels. Currently, there is a controversy as to whether the cAMP-induced increase in Na(+) transport is due solely to hyperpolarization of the cytoplasmic side of the ATII cell membrane due to Cl(-) influx or whether it results from simultaneous stimulation of both Cl(-) and Na(+) conductive pathways. Additional studies are needed to resolve this issue.  相似文献   

12.
Active Na(+) absorption by alveolar ENaC is the main driving force of liquid clearance at birth and lung edema resorption in adulthood. We have demonstrated previously that long-term modulation of KvLQT1 and K(ATP) K(+) channel activities exerts sustained control in Na(+) transport through the regulation of ENaC expression in primary alveolar type II (ATII) cells. The goal of the present study was: 1) to investigate the role of the α-ENaC promoter, transfected in the A549 alveolar cell line, in the regulation of ENaC expression by K(+) channels, and 2) to determine the physiological impact of K(+) channels and ENaC modulation on fluid clearance in ATII cells. KvLQT1 and K(ATP) channels were first identified in A549 cells by PCR and Western blotting. We showed, for the first time, that KvLQT1 activation by R-L3 (applied for 24h) increased α-ENaC expression, similarly to K(ATP) activation by pinacidil. Conversely, pharmacological KvLQT1 and K(ATP) inhibition or silencing with siRNAs down-regulated α-ENaC expression. Furthermore, K(+) channel blockers significantly decreased α-ENaC promoter activity. Our results indicated that this decrease in promoter activity could be mediated, at least in part, by the repressor activity of ERK1/2. Conversely, KvLQT1 and K(ATP) activation dose-dependently enhanced α-ENaC promoter activity. Finally, we noted a physiological impact of changes in K(+) channel functions on ERK activity, α-, β-, γ-ENaC subunit expression and fluid absorption through polarized ATII cells. In summary, our results disclose that K(+) channels regulate α-ENaC expression by controlling its promoter activity and thus affect the alveolar function of fluid clearance.  相似文献   

13.
14.
15.
Distal lung epithelial cells isolated from fetal rats were cultured (48 h) on permeable supports so that transepithelial ion transport could be quantified electrometrically. Unstimulated cells generated a short-circuit current (I(sc)) that was inhibited (~80%) by apical amiloride. The current is thus due, predominantly, to the absorption of Na(+) from the apical solution. Isoprenaline increased the amiloride-sensitive I(sc) about twofold. Experiments in which apical membrane Na(+) currents were monitored in basolaterally permeabilized cells showed that this was accompanied by a rise in apical Na(+) conductance (G(Na(+))). Isoprenaline also increased apical Cl- conductance (G(Cl-)) by activating an anion channel species sensitive to glibenclamide but unaffected by 4,4'-diisothiocyanatostilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid (DIDS). The isoprenaline-evoked changes in G(Na(+)) and G(Cl(minus sign)) could account for the changes in I(sc) observed in intact cells. Glibenclamide had no effect upon the isoprenaline-evoked stimulation of I(sc) or G(Na(+)) demonstrating that the rise in G(Cl-) is not essential to the stimulation of Na(+) transport.  相似文献   

16.
Electrolyte transport across the adult alveolar epithelium plays an important role in maintaining a thin fluid layer along the apical surface of the alveolus that facilitates gas exchange across the epithelium. Most of the work published on the transport properties of alveolar epithelial cells has focused on the mechanisms and regulation of Na(+) transport and, in particular, the role of amiloride-sensitive Na(+) channels in the apical membrane and the Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase located in the basolateral membrane. Less is known about the identity and role of Cl(-) and K(+) channels in alveolar epithelial cells, but studies are revealing important functions for these channels in regulation of alveolar fluid volume and ionic composition. The purpose of this review is to examine previous work published on Cl(-) and K(+) channels in alveolar epithelial cells and to discuss the conclusions and speculations regarding their role in alveolar cell transport function.  相似文献   

17.
Submucosal cholinergic and noncholinergic neurons in intestines have been shown to be involved in regulating epithelial transport functions, particularly stimulating Cl(-) secretion. This study investigates the role of submucosal cholinergic neurons in regulating electrogenic Na(+) absorption in distal colon. Amiloride-sensitive short-circuit current (I(sc)) and (22)Na(+) flux were measured in mucosal and mucosal-submucosal preparations mounted in Ussing chambers. In the mucosal preparation, carbachol (CCh) added to the serosal side inhibited amiloride-sensitive I(sc) and amiloride-sensitive (22)Na(+) absorption. The inhibitory effect of CCh was observed at approximately 0.1 microM, and maximum inhibition of approximately 70% was attained at approximately 30 microM (IC(50) = approximately 1 microM). CCh-induced inhibition of amiloride-sensitive I(sc) was almost totally abolished by 10 microM atropine. Treatment of the tissue with ionomycin markedly reduced amiloride-sensitive I(sc), but a subsequent addition of CCh further decreased it. Also, CCh still had an inhibitory effect, although significantly attenuated, after the tissue had been incubated with a low-Ca(2+) solution containing ionomycin and BAPTA-AM. Applying electrical field stimulation to submucosal neurons in the mucosal-submucosal preparation resulted in inhibition of amiloride-sensitive I(sc), approximately 33% of this inhibition being atropine sensitive. Physostigmine inhibited amiloride-sensitive I(sc), this effect being abolished by atropine. In conclusion, submucosal cholinergic and noncholinergic neurons were involved in inhibiting electrogenic Na(+) absorption in colon. This inhibition by cholinergic neurons was mediated by muscarinic receptor activation.  相似文献   

18.
Antidiuretic hormone and/or cAMP increase Na(+) transport in the rat renal collecting duct and similar epithelia, including Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cell monolayers grown in culture. This study was undertaken to determine if that increment in Na(+) transport could be explained quantitatively by an increased density of ENaC Na(+) channels in the apical membrane. MDCK cells with no endogenous ENaC expression were retrovirally transfected with rat alpha-, beta-, and gammaENaC subunits, each of which were labeled with the FLAG epitope in their extracellular loop as described previously (Firsov, D., L. Schild, I. Gautschi, A.-M. Mérillat, E. Schneeberger, and B.C. Rossier. 1996. PROC: Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 93:15370-15375). The density of ENaC subunits was quantified by specific binding of (125)I-labeled anti-FLAG antibody (M2) to the apical membrane, which was found to be a saturable function of M2 concentration with half-maximal binding at 4-8 nM. Transepithelial Na(+) transport was measured as the amiloride-sensitive short-circuit current (AS-I(sc)) across MDCK cells grown on permeable supports. Specific M2 binding was positively correlated with AS-I(sc) measured in the same experiments. Stimulation with cAMP (20 microM 8-p-chlorothio-cAMP plus 200 microM IBMX) significantly increased AS-I(sc) from 11.2 +/- 1.3 to 18.1 +/- 1.3 microA/cm(2). M2 binding (at 1.7 nM M2) increased in direct proportion to AS-I(sc) from 0.62 +/- 0.13 to 1.16 +/- 0.18 fmol/cm(2). Based on the concentration dependence of M2 binding, the quantity of Na(+) channels per unit of AS-I(sc) was calculated to be the same in the presence and absence of cAMP, 0.23 +/- 0.04 and 0.21 +/-0.05 fmol/microA, respectively. These values would be consistent with a single channel conductance of approximately 5 pS (typically reported for ENaC channels) only if the open probability is <0.02, i.e., less than one-tenth of the typical value. We interpret the proportional increases in binding and AS-I(sc) to indicate that the increased density of ENaC subunits in the apical membrane can account completely for the I(sc) increase produced by cAMP.  相似文献   

19.
We investigated the mechanisms by which serine proteases alter lung fluid clearance in rat lungs and vectorial ion transport in airway and alveolar epithelial cells. Inhibition of endogenous protease activity by intratracheal instillation of soybean trypsin inhibitor (SBTI) or alpha(1)-antitrypsin decreased amiloride-sensitive lung fluid clearance across rat fluid-filled lungs; instillation of trypsin partially restored this effect. Gelatin zymography demonstrated SBTI-inhibitable trypsin-like activity in rat lung lavage fluid. Apical trypsin and human neutrophil elastase, but not agonists of protease activated receptors, increased Na(+) and Cl(-) short-circuit currents (I(sc)) and transepithelial resistance (R(TE)) across human bronchial and nasal epithelial cells and rat alveolar type II cells, mounted in Ussing chambers, for at least 2 h. The increase in I(sc) was fully reversed by amiloride and glibenclamide. The increase in R(TE) was not prevented by ouabain, suggesting that trypsin decreased paracellular conductance. Apical trypsin also induced a transient increase in intracellular Ca(2+) in human airway cells; treatment of these cells with BAPTA-AM mitigated the trypsin-induced increases of intracellular Ca(2+) and of I(sc) and R(TE). Increasing intracellular Ca(2+) in airway cells with either ionomycin or thapsigargin reproduced the increase in I(sc), whereas inhibitors of phospholipase C (PLC) prevented the increases in both Ca(2+) and I(sc). These data indicate trypsin-like proteases and elastase, either present in lung cells or released by inflammatory cells into the alveolar space, play an important role in the clearance of alveolar fluid by increasing ion transport and paracellular resistance via a PLC-initiated rise of intracellular Ca(2+).  相似文献   

20.
Derived from bile duct epithelia (BDE), secretion by liver cyst-lining epithelia is positioned to drive cyst expansion but the responsible ion flux pathways have not been characterized. Cyst-lining epithelia were isolated and cultured into high resistance monolayers to assess the ion secretory pathways. Electrophysiologic studies showed a marked rate of constitutive transepithelial ion transport, including Cl(-) secretion and Na(+) absorption. Na(+) absorption was amiloride-sensitive, suggesting the activation of epithelial sodium channels (ENaC). Further, both cAMP(i) and extracellular ATP induced robust secretory responses. Western blotting and immunohistologic analysis of liver cyst epithelia demonstrated expression of P2X4, a potent purinergic receptor in normal BDE. Luminometry and bioassaying measured physiologically relevant levels of ATP in a subset of liver cyst fluid samples. Liver cyst epithelia also displayed a significant capacity to degrade extracellular ATP. In conclusion, regulated ion transport pathways are present in liver cyst epithelia and are positioned to direct fluid secretion into the lumen of liver cysts and promote increases in liver cyst expansion and growth.  相似文献   

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