9 research outputs found

    Defective Fluid Secretion from Submucosal Glands of Nasal Turbinates from CFTR-/- and CFTRΞ”F508/Ξ”F508 Pigs

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    Cystic fibrosis (CF), caused by reduced CFTR function, includes severe sinonasal disease which may predispose to lung disease. Newly developed CF pigs provide models to study the onset of CF pathophysiology. We asked if glands from pig nasal turbinates have secretory responses similar to those of tracheal glands and if CF nasal glands show reduced fluid secretion.Unexpectedly, we found that nasal glands differed from tracheal glands in five ways, being smaller, more numerous (density per airway surface area), more sensitive to carbachol, more sensitive to forskolin, and nonresponsive to Substance P (a potent agonist for pig tracheal glands). Nasal gland fluid secretion from newborn piglets (12 CF and 12 controls) in response to agonists was measured using digital imaging of mucus bubbles formed under oil. Secretion rates were significantly reduced in all conditions tested. Fluid secretory rates (Controls vs. CF, in pl/min/gland) were as follows: 3 Β΅M forskolin: 9.2Β±2.2 vs. 0.6Β±0.3; 1 Β΅M carbachol: 143.5Β±35.5 vs. 52.2Β±10.3; 3 Β΅M forskolin + 0.1 Β΅M carbachol: 25.8Β±5.8 vs. CF 4.5Β±0.9. We also compared CF(Ξ”F508/Ξ”F508) with CFTR(-/-) piglets and found significantly greater forskolin-stimulated secretion rates in the Ξ”F508 vs. the null piglets (1.4Β±0.8, nβ€Š=β€Š4 vs. 0.2Β±0.1, nβ€Š=β€Š7). An unexpected age effect was also discovered: the ratio of secretion to 3 Β΅M forskolin vs. 1 Β΅M carbachol was ∼4 times greater in adult than in neonatal nasal glands.These findings reveal differences between nasal and tracheal glands, show defective fluid secretion in nasal glands of CF pigs, reveal some spared function in the Ξ”F508 vs. null piglets, and show unexpected age-dependent differences. Reduced nasal gland fluid secretion may predispose to sinonasal and lung infections

    Acute Effects of Cigarette Smoke Extract on Alveolar Epithelial Sodium Channel Activity and Lung Fluid Clearance

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    Cigarette smoke contains high levels of reactive species. Moreover, cigarette smoke can induce cellular production of oxidants. The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of cigarette smoke extract (CSE)-derived oxidants on epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) activity in alveolar type 1 (T1) and type 2 (T2) cells and to measure corresponding rates of fluid clearance in mice receiving a tracheal instillation of CSE. Single-channel patch clamp analysis of T1 and T2 cells demonstrate that CSE exposure increases ENaC activity (NPo), measured as the product of the number of channels (N) and a channels open probability (Po), from 0.17 Β± 0.07 to 0.34 Β± 0.10 (n = 9; P = 0.04) in T1 cells. In T2 cells, CSE increased NPo from 0.08 Β± 0.03 to 0.35 Β± 0.10 (n = 9; P = 0.02). In both cell types, addition of tetramethylpiperidine and glutathione attenuated CSE-induced increases in ENaC NPo. Biotinylation and cycloheximide chase assays indicate that CSE-derived ROS increases channel activity, in part, by maintaining cell surface expression of the Ξ±-ENaC subunit. In vivo studies show that tracheal instillation of CSE promoted alveolar fluid clearance after 105 minutes compared with vehicle control (n = 10/group; P < 0.05)

    Airway Epithelium

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