Am. J. Respir. Cell Mol. Biol., Vol 17, No. 3, 09 1997, 289-301.
Repair of elastase-digested elastic fibers in acellular matrices by replating with neonatal rat-lung lipid interstitial fibroblasts or other elastogenic cell types
PJ Stone, SM Morris, KM Thomas, K Schuhwerk and A Mitchelson
Department of Biochemistry, Boston University School of Medicine, Massachusetts 02118, USA. stone@med-biochm.bu.edu
Disruption of elastic fibers is a major factor in the pathogenesis of
pulmonary emphysema. Elastic fibers in culture, injured by exposure to
elastase, undergo repair in the presence of elastogenic cells that restores
the fibers toward normal as determined by biochemical and ultrastructural
methods. The repair appears to be the result of both salvage and de novo
repair mechanisms. The evidence for salvage repair is that hot-alkali
resistance, lost as a result of elastase treatment, is restored to
previously radiolabeled elastic fibers. This repair mechanism has been
shown in aortic smooth muscle cell cultures. In order to determine the
potential relevance of this mechanism for elastic fiber repair in the
lungs, experiments were carried out using neonatal rat lung lipid
interstitial fibroblasts (LIF). Treatment of the LIF cultures with
elastase, in the absence of serum, caused solubilization of 12% of elastin;
however, 81% of the elastin protein and 80% of the elastin-associated
radioactivity (EAR) were solubilized by subsequent hot-alkali treatment,
indicating that most of the elastin was retained in the matrix but was
damaged. Ultrastructurally, the elastic fibers were frayed. After 6
additional wk in culture, hot- alkali resistant elastin protein and EAR
were restored to 88 and 62% of control values, respectively, and the
ultrastructural appearance of elastic fibers was restored to normal. We
calculate that about 42% of the restored elastin represented salvage
repair; the remainder was new elastin. No repair occurred in matrices
rendered acellular by azide treatment; however, when acellular matrices
were replated with LIF, repair was complete at 6 wk. No repair was seen
when acellular matrices were replated with a transformed mouse macrophage
cell line. We conclude that lung LIF are capable of mounting a robust
repair process after elastolytic injury of elastin and that the repair is
the result of both salvage and de novo repair mechanisms.
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Copyright © 1997 American Thoracic Society.
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