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Publication : Surfactant metabolic consequences of overexpression of GM-CSF in the epithelium of GM-CSF-deficient mice.

First Author  Ikegami M Year  1997
Journal  Am J Physiol Volume  273
Issue  4 Pt 1 Pages  L709-14
PubMed ID  9357844 Mgi Jnum  J:43865
Mgi Id  MGI:1099062 Doi  10.1152/ajplung.1997.273.4.L709
Citation  Ikegami M, et al. (1997) Surfactant metabolic consequences of overexpression of GM-CSF in the epithelium of GM-CSF-deficient mice. Am J Physiol 273(4 Pt 1):L709-14
abstractText  Granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) is a regulator of surfactant metabolism because GM-CSF-deficient mice have abnormally slow clearance and catabolism of saturated phospha- tidylcholine (Sat PC) and surfactant protein (SP)-A in airspaces and lung tissue. Overexpression of GM-CSF only in respiratory epithelial cells of mice deficient in GM-CSF using the SP-C promotor (GM-/-,SP-C-GM+/+) resulted in increased type II cell numbers and normal-ization of alveolar Sat PC pool sizes. Metabolic measurements demonstrated that incorporation of radiolabeled choline and palmitate was increased more than twofold, but the amount of radiolabeled Sat PC that accumulated in airspaces relative to the amount incorporated was decreased by 50% relative to normal GM+/+ mice. The clearance of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine and SP-B from the airspaces was more rapid for GM-/-,SP-C-GM+/+ mice than for GM+/+ mice. Loss of Sat PC and SP-B from the lungs (alveolar plus lung tissue) was similar in the two strains of mice. The normal surfactant pools in the GM-/-,SP-C-GM+/+ mice were achieved by the net effects of increases in type II cell numbers, increased incorporation, decreased accumulation, and increased reuptake rates for surfactant components, demonstrating the multiple effects of GM-CSF on surfactant metabolism.
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