TGF-beta-neutralizing antibodies improve pulmonary alveologenesis and vasculogenesis in the injured newborn lung |
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Authors: | Nakanishi Hidehiko Sugiura Takahiro Streisand James B Lonning Scott M Roberts Jesse D |
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Affiliation: | Department of Anesthesia and Critical Care, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, and Harvard Medical School, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA. |
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Abstract: | Pulmonary injury is associated with the disruption of alveologenesis in the developing lung and causes bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) in prematurely born infants. Transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta is an important regulator of cellular differentiation and early lung development, and its levels are increased in newborn lung injury. Although overexpression of TGF-beta in the lungs of newborn animals causes pathological features that are consistent with BPD, the role of endogenous TGF-beta in the inhibition of the terminal stage of lung development is incompletely understood. In this investigation, the hypothesis that O(2)-induced injury of the maturing lung is associated with TGF-beta-mediated disruption of alveologenesis and microvascular development was tested using a murine model of BPD. Here we report that treatment of developing mouse lungs with TGF-beta-neutralizing antibodies attenuates the increase in pulmonary cell phospho-Smad2 nuclear localization, which is indicative of augmented TGF-beta signaling, associated with pulmonary injury induced by chronic inhalation of 85% oxygen. Importantly, the neutralization of the abnormal TGF-beta activity improves quantitative morphometric indicators of alveologenesis, extracellular matrix assembly, and microvascular development in the injured developing lung. Furthermore, exposure to anti-TGF-beta antibodies is associated with improved somatic growth in hyperoxic mouse pups and not with an increase in pulmonary inflammation. These studies indicate that excessive pulmonary TGF-beta signaling in the injured newborn lung has an important role in the disruption of the terminal stage of lung development. In addition, they suggest that anti-TGF-beta antibodies may be an effective therapy for preventing some important developmental diseases of the newborn lung. |
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