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1.
Pulmonary surfactant contains two families of hydrophobic proteins, SP-B and SP-C. Both proteins are thought to promote the formation of the phospholipid monolayer at the air-fluid interface of the lung. The Wilhelmy plate method was used to study the involvement of SP-B and SP-C in the formation of phospholipid monolayers. The proteins were either present in the phospholipid vesicles which were injected into the subphase or included in a preformed phospholipid monolayer. In agreement with earlier investigators, we found that SP-B and SP-C, present in phospholipid vesicles, were able to induce the formation of a monolayer, as became apparent by an increase in surface pressure. However, when the proteins were present in a preformed phospholipid monolayer (20 mN/m) at similar lipid to protein ratios, the rate of surface pressure increase after injection of pure phospholipid vesicles into the subphase at similar vesicle concentrations was 10 times higher. The process of phospholipid insertion from phospholipid vesicles into the protein-containing monolayers was dependent on (1) the presence of (divalent) cations, (2) the phospholipid concentration in the subphase, (3) the size of the phospholipid vesicles, (4) the protein concentration in the preformed monolayer, and (5) the initial surface pressure at which the monolayers were formed. Both in vesicles and in preformed monolayers, SP-C was less active than SP-B in promoting the formation of a phospholipid monolayer. The use of preformed monolayers containing controlled protein concentrations may allow more detailed studies on the mechanism by which the proteins enhance phospholipid monolayer formation from vesicles.  相似文献   

2.
The aqueous lining of the lung surface exposed to the air is covered by lung surfactant, a film consisting of lipid and protein components. The main function of lung surfactant is to reduce the surface tension of the air-water interface to the low values necessary for breathing. This function requires the exchange of material between the lipid monolayer at the interface and lipid reservoirs under dynamic compression and expansion of the interface during the breathing cycle. We simulated the reversible exchange of material between the monolayer and lipid reservoirs under compression and expansion of the interface. We used a mixture of dipalmitoyl-phosphatidylcholine, palmitoyl-oleoyl-phosphatidylglycerol, cholesterol, and surfactant-associated protein C as a functional analog of mammalian lung surfactant. In our simulations, the monolayer collapses into the water subphase on compression and forms bilayer folds. On monolayer reexpansion, the material is transferred from the folds back to the interface. The simulations indicate that the connectivity of the bilayer aggregates to the monolayer is necessary for the reversibility of the monolayer-bilayer transformation. The simulations also show that bilayer aggregates are unstable in the air subphase and stable in the water subphase.  相似文献   

3.
To determine whether small hydrophobic surfactant peptides (SP-B and SP-C) participate in recycling of pulmonary surfactant phospholipid, we determined the effect of these peptides on transfer of 3H- or 14C-labelled phosphatidylcholine from liposomes to isolated rat alveolar Type II cells and Chinese hamster lung fibroblasts. Both natural and synthetic SP-B and SP-C markedly stimulated phosphatidylcholine transfer to alveolar Type II cells and Chinese hamster lung fibroblasts in a dose- and time-dependent fashion. Effects of the peptides on phospholipid uptake were dose-dependent, but not saturable and occurred at both 4 and 37 degrees C. Uptake of labelled phospholipid into a lamellar body fraction prepared from Type II cells was augmented in the presence of SP-B. Neither SP-B nor SP-C augmented exchange of labelled plasma membrane phosphatidylcholine from isolated Type II cells or enhanced the release of surfactant phospholipid when compared to liposomes without SP-B or SP-C. Addition of native bovine SP-B and SP-C to the phospholipid vesicles perturbed the size and structure of the vesicles as determined by electron microscopy. To determine the structural elements responsible for the effect of the peptides on phospholipid uptake, fragments of SP-B were synthesized by solid-phase protein synthesis and their effects on phospholipid uptake assessed in Type II epithelial cells. SP-B (1-60) stimulated phospholipid uptake 7-fold. A smaller fragment of SP-B (15-60) was less active and the SP-B peptide (40-60) failed to augment phospholipid uptake significantly. Like SP-B and SP-C, surfactant-associated protein (SP-A) enhanced phospholipid uptake by Type II cells. However, SP-A failed to significantly stimulate phosphatidylcholine uptake by Chinese hamster lung fibroblasts. These studies demonstrate the independent activity of surfactant proteins SP-B and SP-C on the uptake of phospholipid by Type II epithelial cells and Chinese hamster lung fibroblasts in vitro.  相似文献   

4.
Adipocyte differentiation-related protein (ADrP) is an intrinsic lipid storage droplet protein that is highly expressed in lung. ADrP localizes to lipid storage droplets within lipofibroblasts, pulmonary cells characterized by high triacylglycerol, which is a precursor for surfactant phospholipid synthesis by alveolar type II epithelial (EPII) cells. The developmental pattern of ADrP mRNA and protein expression in lung tissue parallels triacylglycerol accumulation in rat lung. ADrP mRNA levels are relatively high in isolated lipofibroblasts, accounting for the high ADrP expression in lung. Isolated EPII cells, which do not store neutral lipids but derive them from lipofibroblasts, have low levels of ADrP mRNA expression. ADrP is found around lipid droplets in cultured lipofibroblasts, but not in EPII cells isolated from developing rat lung. After coculture with lipofibroblasts, EPII cells acquired ADrP, which associates with lipid droplets. Furthermore, (3)H-labeled triolein in isolated ADrP-coated lipid droplets is a tenfold better substrate for surfactant phospholipid synthesis by cultured EPII cells than (3)H-labeled synthetic triolein alone. Antibodies to ADrP block transfer of neutral lipid. These data suggest a role for ADrP in this novel mechanism for the transfer of lipid between lipofibroblasts and EPII cells.  相似文献   

5.
Extensive homogenization of lung tissue by nitrogen decompression in a Parr disruption bomb increased by 5-fold the yields of low-density phospholipid (d = 1.06) achieved by other methods. This intracellular phospholipid preparation was high in phosphatidylcholines (84.3%), particularly disaturated phosphatidylcholine (51.2%). On the basis of its low density, composition, and morphological appearance, we concluded that this phospholipid was derived from the intracellular compartment of pulmonary surfactant. We examined the relationship between intra- and extra-cellular surfactant pools according to age, gender and silica-induced pulmonary injury. In normal animals the intracellular pool of surfactant phospholipids increased from 1.54 +/- 0.14 mg at 1 day after birth to 62.30 +/- 4.50 mg per pair of lungs after 31 months, and over the same time period the extracellular pool increased from 1.04 +/- 0.15 mg to 27.45 +/- 2.30 mg per pair of lungs. The ratio between the extracellular and intracellular pools of surfactant increased from 1.50 +/- 0.19 at 1 day after birth to 2.28 +/- 0.23 after 31 months of age. The ratio between the two pools was not influenced by gender, but was changed by the intratracheal injection of silica into the lungs. Intratracheal injection of silica dust increased the levels of surfactant in both compartments, but not to the same extent, indicating that the ratio between the pools could be changed by toxic materials. These data suggest the existence of a size relationship between the intra- and the extra-cellular pools of surfactant, a relationship which implies a common regulatory mechanism that can be disturbed during pulmonary injury.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Three phospholipid transfer proteins, namely proteins I, II and III, were purified from the rabbit lung cytosolic fraction. The molecular masses of phospholipid transfer proteins I, II and III are 32 kilodaltons (kDa), 22 kDa and 32 kDa, respectively; their isoelectric point values are 6.5, 7.0 and 6.8, respectively. Phospholipid transfer proteins I and III transferred phosphatidylcholine (PC) and phosphatidylinositol (PI) from donor unilamellar liposomes to acceptor multilamellar liposomes; protein II transferred PC but not PI. All the three phospholipid transfer proteins transferred phosphatidylethanolamine poorly and showed no tendency to transfer triolein. The transfer of [14C]PC from unilamellar liposomes to multilamellar liposomes facilitated by each protein was affected differently by the presence of acidic phospholipids in the PC unilamellar liposomes. In an equal molar ratio of acidic phospholipid and PC, phosphatidylglycerol (PG) reduced the activities of proteins I and III by 70% (P = 0.0004 and 0.0032, respectively) whereas PI and phosphatidylserine (PS) had an insignificant effect. In contrast, the protein II activity was stimulated 2-3-times more by either PG (P = 0.0024), PI (P = 0.0006) or PS (P = 0.0038). In addition, protein II transferred dioleoylPC (DOPC) about 2-times more effectively than dipalmitoylPC (DPPC) (P = 0.0002), whereas proteins I and III transferred DPPC 20-40% more effectively than DOPC but this was statistically insignificant. The markedly different substrate specificities of the three lung phospholipid transfer proteins suggest that these proteins may play an important role in sorting intracellular membrane phospholipids, possibly including lung surfactant phospholipids.  相似文献   

8.
Acute bovine pulmonary edema is a naturally occurring lung disease caused by 3-methylindole (3MI), a ruminal fermentation product of tryptophan. Morphological and in vitro studies have suggested that 3MI causes abnormalities in phospholipid synthesis. The present study was designed to investigate the effect of 3MI on the quantity and functional quality of surfactant using the goat as an experimental model. Following intravenous infusion of 3MI, goats were killed at 6-, 18-, and 30-h intervals. The lungs were removed and intracellular surfactant, in the form of lamellar bodies, and extracellular surfactant from alveolar lavage were quantified. 3MI treatment did cause modest changes in the lamellar body phospholipid pools, decreasing the quantity of phosphatidylcholine and the proportion of palmitate in this fraction. The quantity of lavage phospholipids was not significantly affected. There was an increase in the protein content of the lavage, reflecting the presence of edema. The functional quality of the surfactant isolated from the lavage fraction was tested in vitro using a pulsating bubble surfactometer. 3MI infusion decreased the ability of surfactant to lower the surface tension of an air bubble at maximum radius and during compression.  相似文献   

9.
Adsorption to the air-water interface of natural lung surfactant obtained by bovine lung lavage is compared and contrasted with the adsorption of mixtures of synthetic phospholipids and of extracted mixed lung lipids containing minimal protein. Surface pressure-time (pi-t) adsorption isotherms are measured at 35 degrees C for the surfactant mixtures as a function of the presence or absence of divalent metal cations (Ca2+ and Mg2+) and of heating to 45 degrees C or 90 degrees C. The effect of aqueous dispersion technique (sonication or mechanical vortexing) on the adsorption process is also studied for the extracted or synthetic phospholipid mixtures. The results imply that the protein component is necessary for the optimal adsorption of natural lung surfactant. However, by taking advantage of different methods available for phospholipid dispersion in an aqueous phase in vitro, it is possible to formulate dispersions of extracted lung phospholipids containing of order 1% protein which adsorb as well as the complete surfactant system. These results suggest that protein concentrations in surfactant mixtures can be minimized for applications such as exogenous lung surfactant replacement for the neonatal Respiratory Distress Syndrome (RDS). However, for situations which may involve alterations in endogenous surfactant function such as in lung injury, effects involving pulmonary surfactant protein and protein-lipid interactions may be of functional significance.  相似文献   

10.
This research studies the biophysical surface activity of synthetic phospholipids combined in vitro with purified lung surfactant apoprotein, having an Mr of 6000. Hydrophobic surfactant-associated protein (SAP-6) was delipidated and purified from both bovine and canine lung lavage, and was combined in vitro with a synthetic phospholipid mixture (SM) of similar composition to natural lung surfactant phospholipids. SM phospholipids were also combined and studied biophysically with another purified surfactant-associated protein, SAP-35. The biophysical activity of synthetic phospholipid-apoprotein combinants was assessed by measurements of adsorption facility and dynamic surface tension lowering ability at 37 degrees C. The SM-SAP-6 combinants had adsorption facility equivalent to natural lung surfactant, and to the surfactant extract preparations CLSE and surfactant-TA used in exogenous surfactant replacement therapy for the neonatal Respiratory Distress Syndrome (RDS). The synthetic phospholipid-SAP-6 combinants also lowered surface tension to less than 1 dyne/cm under dynamic compression in an oscillating bubble apparatus at concentrations as low as 0.5 mg phospholipid/ml. A striking finding was that this excellent dynamic surface activity was preserved as SAP-6 composition was reduced to values as low as 5 micrograms/5 mg SM phospholipid (0.1% SAP-6 protein), an order of magnitude less than the 1% protein content of CLSE and surfactant-TA. Mixtures of SM phospholipids plus SAP-35, the major surfactant glycoprotein, had significantly lower biophysical activity, which did not approach that of a functional lung surfactant. These results suggest that synthetic exogenous surfactants of potential utility for replacement therapy in RDS can be formulated by combining synthetic phospholipids in vitro with specifically purified, hydrophobic surfactant-associated protein, SAP-6.  相似文献   

11.
The proteins of human lung surfactant   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Human pulmonary surfactant was purified from bronchoalveolar lavage of patients. The proteins present in surfactant were analyzed by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis into serum and non-serum components. One non-serum surfactant protein (Mr = 43 000) was then identified in the 100 000 X g supernatant of a lung homogenate on the basis of phospholipid binding. This lung protein was purified and partially characterized. The presence of 3-methyl histidine and reaction in Western blot analysis with antibody against chicken muscle actin both strongly suggested that the 43 000 Da protein of human surfactant is indeed cytoplasmic actin. It is proposed that this surfactant protein is involved in the secretion and not necessarily in the function of surfactant.  相似文献   

12.
Depletion of alveolar macrophages (AM) leads to an increase in endogenous surfactant that lasts several days beyond the repletion of AM. Furthermore, impairment to the endogenous pulmonary surfactant system contributes to ventilation-induced lung injury. The objective of the current study was to determine whether increased endogenous surfactant pools induced via AM depletion was protective against ventilation-induced lung injury. Adult rats were intratracheally instilled with either control or dichloromethylene diphosphonic acid (DMDP) containing liposomes to deplete AMs and thereby increase endogenous surfactant pools. Either 3 or 7 days following instillation, rats were exposed to 2 h of injurious ventilation using either an ex vivo or in vivo ventilation protocol and were compared with nonventilated controls. The measured outcomes were oxygenation, lung compliance, lavage protein, and inflammatory cytokine concentrations. Compared with controls, the DMDP-treated animals had significantly reduced AM numbers and increased surfactant pools 3 days after instillation. Seven days after instillation, AM numbers had returned to normal, but surfactant pools were still elevated. DMDP-treated animals at both time points exhibited protection against ventilation-induced lung injury, which included superior physiological parameters, lower protein leakage, and lower inflammatory mediator release into the air space, compared with animals not receiving DMDP. It is concluded that DMDP-liposome administration protects against ventilation-induced lung injury. This effect appears to be due to the presence of elevated endogenous surfactant pools.  相似文献   

13.
The monolayer technique has been used to study the interaction of lipids with plasma apolipoproteins. Apolipoprotein C-II and C-III from human very low density lipoproteins, apolipoprotein A-I from human high density lipoproteins and arginine-rich protein from swine very low density lipoproteins were studied. The injection of each apoprotein underneath a monolayer of egg phosphatidy[14C]choline at 20 mN/m caused an increase in surface pressure to approximately 30 mN/m. With apolipoprotein C-II and apolipoprotein C-III there was a decrease in surface radioactivity indicating that the apoproteins were removing phospholipid from the interface; the removal of phospholipid was specific for apolipoprotein C-II and apolipoprotein C-III. Although there was a removal of phospholipid from the monolayer, the surface pressure remained constant and was due to the accumulation of apoprotein at the interface. The rate of surface radioactivity decrease was a function of protein concentration, required lipid in a fluid state and, of the lipids tested, was specific for phosphatidylcholine. Cholesterol and phosphatidylinositol were not removed from the interface. The addition of 33 mol% cholesterol to the phosphatidylcholine monolayer did not affect the removal of phospholipids by apolipoprotein C-III. The addition of phospholipid liposomes to the subphase greatly facilitated the apolipoprotein C-II-mediated removal of phospholipid from the interface. Although apolipoprotein A-I and arginine-rich protein gave surface pressure increases, phospholipid was only slightly removed fromthe interface by the addition of liposomes. Based on these findings, we conclude that the apolipoproteins C interact specifically with phosphatidylcholine at the interface. This interaction is important as it relates to the transfer of the apolipoproteins C and phospholipids from very low density lipoproteins to other plasma lipoproteins. The addition of human plasma high density lipoproteins or very low density lipoproteins to the subphase increased the apolipoprotein C-mediated removal of phosphatidyl[14C]choline from the interface 3--4 fold. Low density lipoproteins did not affect the rate of decrease. During lipolysis of very low density lipoproteins to the subphase increased the apolipoprotein C-mediated removal of with the lipid monolayer. Lipolysis experiments were performed in a monolayer trough containing a surface film of egg phosphatidyl[14C]choline and a subphase of very low density lipoproteins and bovine serum albumin. Lipolysis was initiated by the addition of purified milk lipoprotein lipase to the subphase. As a result of lipolysis, there was a decrease in surface radioactivity of phosphatidylcholine. The pre-addition of high density lipoproteins decreased the rate of decrease in surface radioactivity...  相似文献   

14.
These in vitro experiments study a potential mechanism by which plasma proteins, found in the alveoli during pulmonary edema and hemorrhage, may act to inhibit the surface activity of pulmonary surfactant. The results indicate that the inhibition of the adsorption facility and surface tension lowering ability of a calf lung surfactant extract (CLSE) by albumin, hemoglobin, or fibrinogen may be completely abolished by centrifugation of the protein-surfactant mixture at 12,500 x g. Furthermore, albumin, hemoglobin and fibrinogen (1.25 mg/ml) were shown to inhibit the adsorption of high concentrations of CLSE (0.32 mg/ml), normally unaffected by the addition of exogenous proteins, when the CLSE was injected into the subphase under a preformed protein surface film. Similarly, injection of large amounts of these proteins (2.5 mg/ml) into the subphase beneath a preformed CLSE surface film was without effect, even though the CLSE concentration was only 0.06 mg/ml, a surfactant concentration which is normally inhibited by even small amounts of exogenous protein. Taken together, the data suggest that some proteins may inhibit surfactant function by preventing the surfactant phospholipids from adsorbing to the air-liquid interface, possibly by a competition between the proteins and CLSE phospholipids for space at the air-liquid interface rather than direct molecular interactions between proteins and surfactant.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
The main function of pulmonary surfactant, a mixture of lipids and proteins, is to reduce the surface tension at the air/liquid interface of the lung. The hydrophobic surfactant proteins SP-B and SP-C are required for this process. When testing their activity in spread films in a captive bubble surfactometer, both SP-B and SP-C showed concentration dependence for lipid insertion as well as for lipid film refinement. Higher activity in DPPC refinement of the monolayer was observed for SP-B compared with SP-C. Further differences between both proteins were found, when subphase phospholipid vesicles, able to create a monolayer-attached lipid reservoir, were omitted. SP-C containing monolayers showed gradually increasing minimum surface tensions upon cycling, indicating that a lipid reservoir is required to prevent loss of material from the monolayer. Despite reversible cycling dynamics, SP-B containing monolayers failed to reach near-zero minimum surface tensions, indicating that the reservoir is required for stable films.  相似文献   

17.
The hydrophobic lung surfactant protein, SP-B, is essential for survival. Cycling of lung volume during respiration requires a surface-active lipid-protein layer at the alveolar air-water interface. SP-B may contribute to surfactant layer maintenance and renewal by facilitating contact and transfer between the surface layer and bilayer reservoirs of surfactant material. However, only small effects of SP-B on phospholipid orientational order in model systems have been reported. In this study, N-terminal (SP-B(8-25)) and C-terminal (SP-B(63-78)) helices of SP-B, either linked as Mini-B or unlinked but present in equal amounts, were incorporated into either model phospholipid mixtures or into bovine lipid extract surfactant in the form of vesicle dispersions or mechanically oriented bilayer samples. Deuterium and phosphorus nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) were used to characterize effects of these peptides on phospholipid chain orientational order, headgroup orientation, and the response of lipid-peptide mixtures to mechanical orientation by mica plates. Only small effects on chain orientational order or headgroup orientation, in either vesicle or mechanically oriented samples, were seen. In mechanically constrained samples, however, Mini-B and its component helices did have specific effects on the propensity of lipid-peptide mixtures to form unoriented bilayer populations which do not exchange with the oriented fraction on the timescale of the NMR experiment. Modification of local bilayer orientation, even in the presence of mechanical constraint, may be relevant to the transfer of material from bilayer reservoirs to a flat surface-active layer, a process that likely requires contact facilitated by the formation of highly curved protrusions.  相似文献   

18.
Carcinoembryonic cell adhesion molecule 6 (CEACAM6) is a glycosylated, glycophosphatidylinositol-anchored protein expressed in epithelial cells of various primate tissues. It binds gram-negative bacteria and is overexpressed in human cancers. CEACAM6 is associated with lamellar bodies of cultured type II cells of human fetal lung and protects surfactant function in vitro. In this study, we characterized CEACAM6 expression in vivo in human lung. CEACAM6 was present in lung lavage of premature infants at birth and increased progressively in intubated infants with lung disease. Of surfactant-associated CEACAM6, ~80% was the fully glycosylated, 90-kDa form that contains the glycophosphatidylinositol anchor, and the concentration (3.9% of phospholipid for adult lung) was comparable to that for surfactant proteins (SP)-A/B/C. We examined the affinity of CEACAM6 by purification of surfactant on density gradient centrifugation; concentrations of CEACAM6 and SP-B per phospholipid were unchanged, whereas levels of total protein and SP-A decreased by 60%. CEACAM6 mRNA content decreased progressively from upper trachea to peripheral fetal lung, whereas protein levels were similar in all regions of adult lung, suggesting proximal-to-distal developmental expression in lung epithelium. In adult lung, most type I cells and ~50% of type II cells were immunopositive. We conclude that CEACAM6 is expressed by alveolar and airway epithelial cells of human lung and is secreted into lung-lining fluid, where fully glycosylated protein binds to surfactant. Production appears to be upregulated during neonatal lung disease, perhaps related to roles of CEACAM6 in surfactant function, cell proliferation, and innate immune defense.  相似文献   

19.
Lung cells are among the first tissues of the body to be exposed to air-borne environmental contaminants. Consequently the function of these cells may be altered before other cells are affected. As gas exchange takes place in the lungs, changes in cellular function may have serious implications for the processes of oxygen uptake and carbon dioxide elimination. In order for these processes to occur, the lung must maintain a high degree of expandability. This latter function is accomplished in part by the pulmonary surfactant which is synthesized and released by alveolar type II cells. Earlier studies have shown that exposure to gas phase materials such as smoke or organic solvents can alter the composition and function of the surfactant. The present study examines the ability of highly toxigenic mold spores to alter surfactant composition. Stachybotrys chartarum spores suspended in saline were instilled into mouse trachea as described earlier. After 24 h, the lungs were lavaged and the different processing stages of surfactant isolated by repeated centrifugation. Intracellular surfactant was isolated from the homogenized lung tissue by centrifugation on a discontinuous sucrose gradient. Samples were extracted into chloroform-methanol, dried and analyzed by Fourier-Transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR). Exposure to S. chartarum induced an overall reduction of phospholipid among the three surfactant subfractions. The intermediate and spent surfactant fractions in particular were reduced to about half of the values observed in the saline-treated group. The relative distribution of phospholipid was also altered by spore exposure. Within the intracellular surfactant pool, higher levels of phospholipid were detected after spore exposure. In addition, changes were observed in the nature of the phospholipids. In particular strong intramolecular hydrogen bonding, together with other changes, suggested that spore exposure was associated with absence of an acyl chain esterified on the glycerol backbone, resulting in elevated levels of lysophospholipid in the samples. This study shows that mold spores and their products induce changes in regulation of both secretion and synthesis of surfactant, as well as alterations in the pattern of phospholipid targeting to the pulmonary surfactant pools.  相似文献   

20.
Bovine lung surfactant material, isolated by three steps of centrifugation from lung washings, had a phospholipid: protein ration of 4.98+/-S.D. 0.62 mumol/mg. Sucrose continuous density gradient centrifugation showed only one visible band at a density of 1.081 g/ml. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-disc gel electrophoresis patterns of the apoprotein extracted from this material revealed that the main component (70-80%) of the protein subunits of bovine lung surfactant material has a molecular weight of 36 000. It was suggested that the apoprotein of bovine lung surfactant material exists as a combination of a few protein subunits, most of which have a molecular weight of 36 000.  相似文献   

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