학술논문

Effect of alveolar epithelial cell plasticity on the regulation of GM-CSF expression
granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor
Document Type
Author abstract
Source
American Journal of Physiology (Consolidated). March 2012, Vol. 302 Issue 3, pL504, 8 p.
Subject
Physiological aspects
Genetic aspects
Research
Risk factors
Cytokines -- Physiological aspects
Cytokines -- Genetic aspects
Cytokines -- Research
Granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor -- Physiological aspects
Granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor -- Genetic aspects
Granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor -- Research
Lung diseases -- Risk factors
Lung diseases -- Genetic aspects
Lung diseases -- Research
Language
English
ISSN
0002-9513
Abstract
Local pulmonary expression of granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) is critically important for defense of the pulmonary alveolar space. It is required for surfactant homeostasis and pulmonary innate immune responses and is protective against lung injury and aberrant repair. Alveolar epithelial cells (AEC) are a major source of GM-CSF; however, the control of homeostatic expression of GM-CSF is incompletely characterized. Increasing evidence suggests considerable plasticity of expression of AEC phenotypic characteristics. We tested the hypothesis that this plasticity extends to regulation of expression of GM-CSF using 1) MLE-12 cells (a commonly used murine cell line expressing some features of normal type II AEC, 2) primary murine AEC incubated under standard conditions [resulting in rapid spreading and loss of surfactant protein C (SP-C) expression with induction of the putative type I cell marker (T1[alpha])], or 3) primary murine AEC on a hyaluronic acid/collagen matrix in defined medium, resulting in preservation of SP-C expression. AEC in standard cultures constitutively express abundant GM-CSF, with further induction in response to IL- 1[beta] but little response to TNF-[alpha]. In contrast, primary cells cultured to preserve SP-C expression and MLE-12 cells both express little GM-CSF constitutively, with significant induction in response to TNF-[alpha] and limited response to IL-1[beta]. We conclude that constitutive and cytokine-induced expression of GM-CSF by AEC varies in concert with other cellular phenotypic characteristics. These changes may have important implications both for the maintenance of normal pulmonary homeostasis and for the process of repair following lung injury. lung; growth factors; innate immunity; cell-cell interaction; alveolar macrophages; granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor doi: 10.1152/ajplung.00303.2010.

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