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1.
The purpose of this study is to determine if inframammalian vertebrate (amphibian) lung contains certain nonspecific esterases that have been identified as enzyme markers for mammalian (rat and mouse) pulmonary surfactant. Density gradient centrifugation procedures were utilized to concentrate any surface-active material in frog lung homogenates. Lipid and protein analyses of one of the derived fractions and of pulmonary lavage fluid were consistent with other techniques indicating that these preparations were surface active. A comparison of the nonspecific esterases in the derived fractions and the pulmonary lavage fluid allowed the identification of a nonspecific esterase that has an electrophoretic mobility comparable to one of the nonspecific esterases already identified as an enzyme marker for mammalian (rat and mouse) pulmonary surfactant. These results indicate that these enzyme markers may be useful in the further investigation of the surfactant systems of other inframammalian vertebrates.  相似文献   

2.
Type II alveolar epithelial cells were isolated from fetal rat lung by differential adherence in monolayer culture. The preparation had a high degree of purity, as assessed by phase contrast microscopy and immunocytochemistry. Purity, based on reactivity with specific anti-adult lung serum (SAALS), which recognizes only type II cells, was 91% for cells isolated from 19-day fetal lungs and 79% for cells isolated from 21-day fetal lungs. The lower purity of type II cells in cultures derived from 1-day postnatal rat lungs (51% cells reactive with SAALS) is probably due to a lower tendency of the type II cells from neonatal rats to adhere to culture dishes than of type II cells from fetal rats. Type II cells isolated from 21-day fetal lungs contained a higher percentage phosphatidylglycerol and incorporated [Me-3H]choline faster into phosphatidylcholine (PC) than type II cells isolated from 19-day fetal lungs. Moreover, in cell preparations derived from lungs at fetal day 21, a higher percentage of epithelial cells contained lamellar bodies than in preparations derived from lungs at fetal day 19. The observation of these differences in the stage of maturation indicates that these differences, which are typical features of the original material, are not obliterated by differentiation during the culture. Type II cells isolated according to the present procedure were capable of synthesizing PC with a high percentage of the disaturated species. This method for the isolation of fetal type II cells may be a useful tool in studies concerning surfactant synthesis and its regulation in the fetal lung.  相似文献   

3.
Glucocorticoids accelerate fetal lung maturation by acting on the fetal lung fibroblast to induce the synthesis of fibroblast-pneumonocyte factor which in turn stimulates pulmonary surfactant synthesis by the alveolar type II cell. We have studied the site of glucocorticoid regulation of fibroblast-pneumonocyte factor synthesis in primary cultures of fetal rat lung fibroblasts. Conditioned media from fetal rat lung fibroblasts exposed to cortisol stimulate [Me-3H]choline incorporation into saturated phosphatidylcholine by primary cultures of fetal rat lung alveolar type II cells. This effect is blocked by the presence of actinomycin D during the first, but not the second, 24 h of incubation of the fibroblasts with cortisol. Cycloheximide blocks this effect if present during either the first or second 24 h of incubation. We fractionated mRNA from fetal rat lung fibroblasts incubated in the presence or absence of dexamethasone and observed that cell-free translation products from a fraction of approximately 500 bases possess biological activity in the bioassay. Such activity is only present in cell-free translation products of mRNA isolated from fibroblasts treated with dexamethasone. These results suggest that glucocorticoids act at a pretranslational level to induce production of fibroblast-pneumonocyte factor and that the primary translation products are biologically active.  相似文献   

4.
Insufficient fetal surfactant production leads to respiratory distress syndrome among preterm infants. Neuregulin signals the onset of fetal surfactant phospholipid synthesis through formation of erbB receptor dimers. We hypothesized that erbB4 downregulation in fetal type II epithelial cells will downregulate not only fetal surfactant phospholipid synthesis, but also affect proliferation and erbB receptor localization. We tested these hypotheses using small interfering RNA (siRNA) directed against the erbB4 gene to silence erbB4 receptor function in cultures of primary day 19 fetal rat lung type II cells. ErbB4 siRNA treatment inhibited erbB4 receptor protein expression, fibroblast-conditioned medium induced erbB4 phosphorylation, and fetal surfactant phospholipid synthesis. Cell proliferation, measured as thymidine incorporation, was also inhibited by erbB4 siRNA treatment. Downregulation of erbB4 receptor protein changed erbB1 localization at baseline and after stimulation, as determined by confocal microscopy and subcellular fractionation. We conclude that erbB4 is an important receptor in the control of fetal lung type II cell maturation.  相似文献   

5.
Prostaglandin production was studied in fetal and adult type II alveolar epithelial cells. Two culture systems were employed, fetal rat lung organotypic cultures consisting of fetal type II cells and monolayer cultures of adult lung type II cells. Dexamethasone, thyroxine, prolactin and insulin, hormones which influence lung development, each reduced the production of prostaglandin E and F alpha by the organotypic cultures. The fetal cultures produced relatively large quantities of prostaglandin E and F alpha and smaller quantities of 6-keto-prostaglandin F1 alpha and thromboxane B2. However, prostaglandin E2 production was predominant. In contrast, the adult type II cells in monolayer culture produced predominantly prostacyclin (6-keto-prostaglandin F1 alpha) along with smaller quantities of prostaglandin E2 and F2 alpha. The type II cells were relatively unresponsive to prostaglandins. Exogenously added prostaglandin E, had no effect on cell growth, and only a minimal effect on cyclic AMP levels in the monolayer cultures.  相似文献   

6.
Type II alveolar epithelia produce, store and secrete pulmonary surfactant, a phospholipid and protein mixture which stabilizes alveoli at low lung volumes and, thereby, prevents alveolar collapse. We determined the developmental changes in the uptake, metabolism and reutilization of surfactant-related phospholipid in primary cultures of type II cells derived from fetal rat lung. Primary cultures of fetal and neonatal type II cells were incubated in media containing labelled liposomes. After the incubation phospholipids were extracted from the cells and uptake of label was analyzed. Re-uptake of radiolabelled dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) was concentration-dependent in undifferentiated fetal cells, differentiated fetal cells and neonatal cells. Re-uptake of DPPC by undifferentiated fetal cells was lower than re-uptake by both differentiated fetal and neonatal cells at 15 and 75 μM PC. Binding of DPPC to the cell surface involved a protein interaction, since trypsin was able to dissociate this trypsin-releasable fraction from internalized label. Undifferentiated fetal, differentiated fetal and neonatal cells all exhibited approx. 50% metabolic degradation of internalized phospholipid. Degraded lipids were reutilized in the synthesis of phosphatidylglycerol, but neonatal cells resynthesized twice as much phosphatidylglycerol as did undifferentiated fetal cells. These are the first studies which show that morphologically undifferentiated fetal type II cells are capable of the uptake of surfactant phospholipid as well as the degradation and reutilization of internalized phospholipid. Re-uptake, degradation and reutilization of internalized phospholipid appear to be under developmental control.  相似文献   

7.
When organotypic cultures of fetal rat lung epithelial cells are initiated with undifferentiated cells, the cells differentiate into type II cells (Douglas W.H.J., McAteer J.A., Smith J.R. and Braunschweiger W.R. (1979) Int. Rev. Cytol., Suppl. 10, 45–65). This conclusion was based only on morphologic studies. The present study was undertaken to investigate whether such maturation in culture could also be demonstrated biochemically. In organotypic cultures initiated with epithelial cells from fetal rat lungs at 17-days gestation, the amount of phospholipids increased for at least 10 days. However, no change took place in the percentage of phosphatidylglycerol nor in the ratio of disaturated to total phosphatidylcholine. In cultures initiated with cells obtained at day 17 of gestation the specific activity of cholinephosphate cytidylyltransferase reached a maximum after approximately 3 days, followed by a decrease. A similar profile was obtained, however, if the culture was started at day 20 of gestation. This indicates that the activity profiles obtained in the organotypic cultures reflect changes caused by the culture conditions rather than changes caused by maturation. From these investigations it is concluded that biochemical studies on type II cell development using organotypic cultures as model should be interpreted with caution.  相似文献   

8.
Epithelial cell differentiation in organotypic cultures of fetal rat lung   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The purpose of this investigation was to examine the suitability of an organotypic lung-cell culture model for the study of factors influencing fetal lung-cell differentiation. It has been reported that the use of carbon-stripped (hormone-depleted) bovine fetal calf serum in monolayer cell cultures of fetal rat lung prevents continued epithelial cell differentiation in vitro. In this study, organotypic cultures of fetal rat lung cells taken at day 20 of gestation (late canalicular stage) were prepared with a carbon-stripped medium. These organotypic cultures were examined by light, scanning, and transmission electron microscopy for comparison with controls prepared with unstripped bovine fetal calf serum. Highly organized three-dimensional tubular epithelial structures resembling saccules of immature lung were observed within the gelatin sponge matrix. Morphometric analysis of day 20 carbon-stripped samples revealed that 74.6% of the epithelial cells in the tubular structures contained osmiophilic lamellar bodies characteristic of type II pneumonocytes. Control specimens had 71.2% cells with lamellar bodies and did not differ significantly from the experimental group. These data are similar to those obtained with organ cultures of fetal rat lung but are in contrast to findings with monolayer culture systems. The observations of this study suggest that 1) the hormones extracted from bovine fetal calf serum by carbon-stripping are not solely responsible for the continued fetal lung cell differentiation observed in vitro, and 2) that spatial relationships between lung cells in vitro may be a significant factor in the control of differentiation.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Normal growth of the fetal lung is dependent on fetal breathing movements. We have previously reported that an intermittent strain, which simulates normal fetal breathing movements, stimulates DNA synthesis and cell division of mixed fetal rat lung cells maintained in organotypic cultures. To examine which cell type is responding to mechanical strain and to investigate whether the effects of strain on cell proliferation and mechanotransduction are affected by tissue architecture, we isolated fetal lung cells and subjected them to intermittent strain either as two-dimensional monolayer cultures or as three-dimensional organotypic cultures. Strain enhanced DNA synthesis of mixed cells, epithelial cells, and fibroblasts when cultured in a three-dimensional configuration. In contrast, no stimulatory effect on cell proliferation was observed depending on the culture conditions. These results suggest that mechanical strain stimulates the proliferation of both epithelial cells and fibroblasts and that the response of fetal lung cells to mechanical strainin vitro depends on cellular architecture.  相似文献   

10.
The cellular mechanism by which glucocorticoids stimulate phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis has been studied in the fetal rat lung in vivo and in cultured fetal rat lung cells of varying levels of complexity. Administration of dexamethasone to pregnant rats at 18 days gestation resulted in a significant increase in saturated phosphatidylcholine content in fetal lung 24 h after injection. Dexamethasone administration increased the activity of fetal lung choline-phosphate cytidylyltransferase by 34%. It had no effect on the activities of fetal lung choline kinase and choline phosphotransferase. Exposure of fetal lung type II cells in organotypic cultures (which contain both type II cells and fibroblasts) to cortisol resulted in a 1.6-fold increase in the incorporation of [Me-3H]choline into saturated phosphatidylcholine. The activities of the enzymes in the choline pathway for the de novo biosynthesis of phosphatidylcholine were not significantly altered except for a 105% increase in choline-phosphate cytidylyltransferase activity. Treatment of monolayer cultures of fetal type II cells with cortisol-conditioned medium from fetal lung fibroblasts resulted in a 1.5-fold increase in saturated phosphatidylcholine production. This effect correlated with a doubling of choline-phosphate cytidylyltransferase activity. Additional evidence that this stimulatory action is mediated by fibroblast-pneumonocyte factor, produced by fetal lung fibroblasts in response to cortisol, was obtained. The factor was partially purified from cortisol-conditioned medium of fetal lung fibroblasts by gel filtration and affinity chromatography. Based on biological activity, a 3000-fold purification was obtained. Stimulation of saturated phosphatidylcholine synthesis in type II cells by fibroblast-pneumonocyte factor was maximal within 60 min of incubation. Pulse-chase experiments indicated that the stimulatory effect was correlated with an increased conversion of choline phosphate into CDP choline. Moreover, the enhanced phosphatidylcholine formation by fetal type II cells in response to fibroblast-pneumonocyte factor was accompanied by decreased levels of cellular choline phosphate. These findings further support the concept that glucocorticoid action on surfactant-associated phosphatidylcholine synthesis occurs ultimately at the level of the alveolar type II cell and involves fibroblast-pneumonocyte factor which stimulates the activity of choline-phosphate cytidylyltransferase.  相似文献   

11.
Although differentiated fetal and adult type II pneumocytes are ultrastructurally similar, it is not known whether there are metabolic differences between them. We measured the activities of selected enzymes of phospholipid and fatty acid synthesis in fetal and adult rat type II cells, in late gestation fetal rat lung explants and in intact lung from rat fetuses of comparable gestational age. The activity of 1-acylglycerophosphocholine acyltransferase was significantly greater in adult type II cells than in fetal type II cells, fetal explants or intact fetal lung. The activity of CDP diacylglycerol:glycerol-3-phosphate 3-phosphatidyltransferase was similar in fetal and adult type II cells, but significantly lower in explants and intact fetal lung. There was a significant positive correlation between the percentage of alveolar epithelial cells in the cultures and tissue studied and CDP diacylglycerol:glycerol-3-phosphate 3-phosphatidyltransferase activity. This suggests that the previously reported correlation between phosphatidylglycerol synthesis and the percentage of alveolar epithelial cells in various lung culture systems may be related to the activity of this enzyme. Phosphatidylglycerol synthesis and CDP diacylglycerol:glycerol-3-phosphate 3-phosphatidyltransferase activity may be metabolic markers of type II cells, whereas the acyltransferase activity may be an indicator of type II cell maturation.  相似文献   

12.
Pulmonary surfactant is a lipoprotein complex that functions to reduce surface tension at the air liquid interface in the alveolus of the mature lung. In late gestation glycogen-laden type II cells shift their metabolic program toward the synthesis of surfactant, of which phosphatidylcholine (PC) is by far the most abundant lipid. To investigate the cellular site of surfactant PC synthesis in these cells we determined the subcellular localization of two key enzymes for PC biosynthesis, fatty acid synthase (FAS) and CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase-alpha (CCT-alpha), and compared their localization with that of surfactant storage organelles, the lamellar bodies (LBs), and surfactant proteins (SPs) in fetal mouse lung. Ultrastructural analysis showed that immature and mature LBs were present within the glycogen pools of fetal type II cells. Multivesicular bodies were noted only in the cytoplasm. Immunogold electron microscopy (EM) revealed that the glycogen pools were the prominent cellular sites for FAS and CCT-alpha. Energy-filtering EM demonstrated that CCT-alpha bound to phosphorus-rich (phospholipid) structures in the glycogen. SP-B and SP-C, but not SP-A, localized predominantly to the glycogen stores. Collectively, these data suggest that the glycogen stores in fetal type II cells are a cellular site for surfactant PC synthesis and LB formation/maturation consistent with the idea that the glycogen is a unique substrate for surfactant lipids.  相似文献   

13.
Human fetal lung (14-18 weeks gestation) was maintained in either organ or organotypic culture. By 4 days in organ culture or 14 days in organotypic culture, epithelial cells within both culture systems exhibited well-developed apical microvilli and possessed numerous intracellular lamellar bodies characteristic of surfactant phospholipid stores. However, analysis of the pattern of synthesis of individual molecular species of phosphatidylcholine by [14C]choline incorporation and reversed-phase h.p.l.c. showed that this apparent maturation was not paralleled by an increased synthesis of the dipalmitoyl species in either culture system. By contrast, the fractional synthesis of dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine, expressed as a percentage of total [14C]choline incorporation, decreased with time in both organ and organotypic culture. Moreover, these fractions were not significantly different from those measured in parallel monolayer cultures of mixed human fetal lung cells that displayed mainly fibroblast morphology. These results suggest that the synthesis pattern of phosphatidylcholine species by lung cells in culture is determined principally by their incubation conditions and not by their state of apparent maturation.  相似文献   

14.
Developing rat lung lipofibroblasts express leptin beginning on embryonic day (E) 17, increasing 7- to 10-fold by E20. Leptin and its receptor are expressed mutually exclusively by fetal lung fibroblasts and type II cells, suggesting a paracrine signaling "loop." This hypothesized mechanism is supported by the following experimental data: 1) leptin stimulates the de novo synthesis of surfactant phospholipid by both fetal rat type II cells (400% x 100 ng(-1) x ml(-1) x 24 h(-1)) and adult human airway epithelial cells (85% x 100 ng(-1) x 24 h(-1)); 2) leptin is secreted by lipofibroblasts in amounts that stimulate type II cell surfactant phospholipid synthesis in vitro; 3) epithelial cell secretions such as parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP), PGE(2), and dexamethasone stimulate leptin expression by fetal rat lung fibroblasts; 4) PTHrP or leptin stimulate the de novo synthesis of surfactant phospholipid (2- to 2.5-fold/24 h) and the expression of surfactant protein B (SP-B; >25-fold/24 h) by fetal rat lung explants, an effect that is blocked by a leptin antibody; and 5) a PTHrP receptor antagonist inhibits the expression of leptin mRNA by explants but does not inhibit leptin stimulation of surfactant phospholipid or SP-B expression, indicating that PTHrP paracrine stimulation of type II cell maturation requires leptin expression by lipofibroblasts. This is the first demonstration of a paracrine loop that functionally cooperates to induce alveolar acinar lung development.  相似文献   

15.
We have developed a relatively simple and reproducible method for the isolation and culture of both differentiated and undifferentiated type II cells from fetal rat lung. The technique involves an initial period of explant culture in serum and hormone free medium, followed by enzymatic dissociation of the explants, differential adhesion to remove fibroblasts, incubation of the cell pellet to promote aggregation of the type II cells and monolayer culture of the type II cells. The type II cells form clusters which are surrounded by scattered fibroblasts. When the technique was performed with three differential adhesion steps, cultures contained 86.0 +/- 1.4% type II cells. To obtain a higher degree of purity and greater yield, two differential adhesions followed by gentle trypsinization of the cultures which selectively removes the isolated fibroblasts was performed. This resulted in cultures with 89.4 +/- 1.7% type II cells. The differentiated fetal type II cell cultures were prepared from 19-day fetal rat lungs which were initially maintained in explant culture for 48 h. These differentiated cells demonstrated the characteristic morphologic features of type II cells including lamellar bodies and microvilli. Undifferentiated fetal cells were prepared in a similar manner from 18-day fetal rat lung maintained in explant culture for 24 h. These cells did not contain intracellular osmiophilic granules; the appearance of these granules could, however, be induced by hormones. For this reason they are considered to be pre-type II cells. The viability of the cultured cells was 97%. Both the differentiated and undifferentiated fetal type II cells specifically bound the Maclura pomifera lectin, a type II cell surface marker. The phospholipid profile of the fetal cells was similar to that of adult rat type II cells; the differentiated fetal cells, however, synthesized less phosphatidylcholine than the adult cells did, but more than the undifferentiated fetal cells. The differentiated fetal cells secreted phosphatidylcholine at a basal rate of 0.6% +/- 0.1% during a 90-min incubation. There was dose-dependent stimulation of phosphatidylcholine secretion after exposure to terbutaline. Maximum stimulation (76%) was observed at a concentration of 10 microM. This culture system provides a valuable model for studies of the maturation of the undifferentiated fetal type II cell and surfactant metabolism and secretion in the differentiated fetal type II cell.  相似文献   

16.
Administration of dexamethasone to pregnant rats at 19 days gestation increased phosphatidylcholine synthesis (45%) from radioactive choline in type II cells. This enhanced synthesis of phosphatidylcholine was accompanied by an increased conversion of choline phosphate into CDP-choline. Similar results were obtained by incubating organotypic cultures of 19-day-fetal rat lung with cortisol. The increased conversion of choline phosphate into CDP-choline correlated with an enhanced choline-phosphate cytidylyltransferase activity (31% after dexamethasone treatment; 47% after cortisol exposure) in the cell homogenates. A similar increase (26% after dexamethasone treatment; 39% after cortisol exposure) was found in the microsomal-associated enzyme. No differences in cytosolic enzyme activity were observed. The specific activity of the microsomal enzyme was 3-4 times that of the cytosolic enzyme. Most of the enzyme activity was located in the microsomal fraction (58-65%). The treatments had no effect on the total amount of enzyme recovered from the cell homogenates. These results, taken collectively, are interpreted to indicate that the active form of cytidylyltransferase in type II cells is the membrane-bound enzyme and that cytidylyltransferase activation in type II cells from fetal rat lung after maternal glucocorticoid administration occurs by binding of inactive cytosolic enzyme to endoplasmic reticulum.  相似文献   

17.
The role in cell multiplication and maturation of several factors present in the late fetal lung was explored on isolated fetal rat pulmonary fibroblasts and alveolar epithelial type II cells cultivated in serum-free medium. The low degree of reciprocal contamination of each cell population was assessed by immunocytochemistry. Epidermal Growth Factor (EGF) stimulated thymidine incorporation and DNA accumulation in both cell types. In type II cells, it increased labeled-choline incorporation into surfactant phosphatidylcholine (PC), consistently with previous data obtained with lung explant cultures, but not into non-surfactant PC. Insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-I slightly stimulated DNA accumulation in fibroblasts although it did not significantly stimulate thymidine incorporation, contrary to IGF-II which presented a dose-dependent stimulating activity of thymidine incorporation. Neither IGF-I nor IGF-II stimulated type II cell growth. IGFs thus appear to primarily control the growth of lung mesenchyme. In type II cells, they stimulated the most non-surfactant PC biosynthesis. Gastrin releasing peptide (GRP) which was recently reported to promote fetal lung growth in vivo and to stimulate surfactant biosynthesis in lung organ culture revealed as a growth factor for type II cells only, at concentrations below 10 −9 M. At concentration 10 −8 M, although it did not affect DNA synthesis, GRP tended to increase surfactant and non-surfactant-PC biosynthesis. Retinoic acid inhibited thymidine incorporation into type II cells on a dose-dependent manner but nevertheless enhanced surfactant-PC biosynthesis to a similar extent as EGF. It is suggested that retinoic acid may represent a differentiation or maturation factor for the alveolar epithelium.  相似文献   

18.
The role in cell multiplication and maturation of several factors present in the late fetal lung was explored on isolated fetal rat pulmonary fibroblasts and alveolar epithelial type II cells cultivated in serum-free medium. The low degree of reciprocal contamination of each cell population was assessed by immunocytochemistry. Epidermal Growth Factor (EGF) stimulated thymidine incorporation and DNA accumulation in both cell types. In type II cells, it increased labeled-choline incorporation into surfactant phosphatidylcholine (PC), consistently with previous data obtained with lung explant cultures, but not into non-surfactant PC. Insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-I slightly stimulated DNA accumulation in fibroblasts although it did not significantly stimulate thymidine incorporation, contrary to IGF-II which presented a dose-dependent stimulating activity of thymidine incorporation. Neither IGF-I nor IGF-II stimulated type II cell growth. IGFs thus appear to primarily control the growth of lung mesenchyme. In type II cells, they stimulated the most non-surfactant PC biosynthesis. Gastrin releasing peptide (GRP) which was recently reported to promote fetal lung growth in vivo and to stimulate surfactant biosynthesis in lung organ culture revealed as a growth factor for type II cells only, at concentrations below 10(-9) M. At concentration 10(-8) M, although it did not affect DNA synthesis, GRP tended to increase surfactant and non-surfactant-PC biosynthesis. Retinoic acid inhibited thymidine incorporation into type II cells on a dose-dependent manner but nevertheless enhanced surfactant-PC biosynthesis to a similar extent as EGF. It is suggested that retinoic acid may represent a differentiation or maturation factor for the alveolar epithelium.  相似文献   

19.
Organotypic cultures of fetal type II epithelial cells were incubated in media containing insulin at concentrations ranging from 10 to 400 microunits/ml. Exposure to insulin resulted in increased glucose uptake from the media and in the rate of glucose conversion to CO2. Furthermore, both glucose uptake and CO2 production were dependent on the glucose concentration in the media. Surfactant and residual phosphatidylcholine fractions were isolated from the organotypic cultures by sucrose density centrifugation. The presence of low doses of insulin (10-25 microunits/ml) caused a significant increase in the incorporation of glucose into both surfactant and residual phosphatidylcholine. Insulin at levels of 100 microunits/ml or higher resulted in a significant decrease in glucose incorporation into both phosphatidylcholine fractions. Increasing the media glucose concentration from 5.6 to 20 mM caused a 2- to 2.5-fold increase in glucose utilization for surfactant and residual phospholipid synthesis, but did not produce any significant changes in choline incorporation into either surfactant or residual phosphatidylcholine. The addition of 400 microunits/ml of insulin to media containing 20 mM glucose, however, resulted in a 20% decrease in choline incorporation into surfactant phosphatidylcholine but had no effect on choline incorporation into residual phosphatidylcholine. These results suggest that insulin is an important hormone regulating fetal lung maturation and that hyperinsulinemia may be responsible for the delayed lung development in infants of diabetic mothers.  相似文献   

20.
CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase (CCT) is a rate-determining enzyme in the de novo synthesis of phosphatidylcholine (PtdCho). Alveolar type II cells synthesize large quantities of disaturated PtdCho, the surface-active agent of pulmonary surfactant, particularly at late gestation when the lung prepares itself for postnatal air breathing. To clarify the role of CCTalpha in lung surfactant maturation, we overexpressed CCTalpha(1-367) using the surfactant protein-C promoter. Lungs of transgenic mice were analyzed at day 18 of gestation (term = 19 days). Overexpression of CCTalpha(1-367) increased the synthesis and content of PtdCho in fetal type II cells isolated from the transgenic mice. Also, PtdCho content of fetal lung fluid was increased. No changes in surfactant protein content were detected. Interestingly, fetal type II cells of transgenic mice contained more glycogen than control cells. Incorporation studies with [U-(14)C]glucose demonstrated that overexpression of CCTalpha(1-367) in fetal type II cells increased glycogen synthesis without affecting glycogen breakdown. To determine which domain contributes to this glycogen phenotype, two additional transgenes were created overexpressing either CCTalpha(1-239) or CCTalpha(239-367). Glycogen synthesis and content were increased in fetal type II cells expressing CCTalpha(239-367) but not CCTalpha(1-239)(.) We conclude that overexpression of CCTalpha increases surfactant PtdCho synthesis without affecting surfactant protein levels but that it disrupts glycogen metabolism in differentiating type II cells via its regulatory domain.  相似文献   

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