Systemic Lipopolysaccharide Stimulates Airway Transepithelial Na+ Transport by Increasing Enac and Na+ (Paperback)


PMOur laboratory found that systemic administration of lipopolysaccharide (LPS; 4 mg/kg) hyperpolarized the transepithelial potential difference (V t) of tracheal epithelium in the isolated, perfused trachea (IPT) of the guinea pig 18 h after injection. We hypothesized that LPS stimulates the transepithelial movement of Na+ via the epithelial sodium channel (ENaC)/Na+,K+-pump axis, leading to hyperpolarization of Vt. LPS increased the Vt response to amiloride, i.e., offset the effect of LPS, indicating that Na+ transport was increased. The functional activity of ENaC was measured in the IPT after short-circuiting the Na+,K+-pump with basolateral amphotericin B. LPS had no effect on the hyperpolarization response to apical trypsin in the Ussing chamber, indicating that channel activating proteases are not involved in the LPS-induced activation of ENaC. To assess Na+,K +-pump activity in the IPT, ENaC was short-circuited with apical amphotericin B. The greater Vt in the presence of amphotericin B in tracheas from LPS-treated animals compared to controls revealed that LPS increased Na+,K+-pump activity. This finding was confirmed in the Ussing chamber by inhibiting the Na+,K+-pump via extracellular K+ removal, loading the epithelium with Na +, and observing a greater hyperpolarization response to K + restoration. Using qPCR, the effects of LPS on the transcription of alphaENaC, alpha1 Na+,K+-pump, COX-2, eNOS, iNOS, IL-1beta, and TNF-alpha were measured at 3 and 18 h. In the epithelium, LPS increased the transcription of COX-2, IL-1beta, and, to nonsignificant extent, TNF-alpha at 3 h, but not at 18 h. In alveolar macrophages, TNF-alpha, and, to a nonsignificant extent, COX-2 and IL-1beta were up-regulated at 3 h, but not at 18 h. Even though LPS stimulated the transcription of some genes, alphaENaC and alpha1 Na +,K+-ATPase transcription were not affected. The expression of alpha-, beta-, and gamma-ENaC and alpha1 Na+,K+-pump from tracheal epithelium and kidney cortex/medulla were investigated by western blotting. All three ENaC subunits were detected as cleavage fragments, yet LPS had no effect on their expression. LPS increased the expression of the alpha1 subunit and the alpha 1-, alpha2-, and alpha3-subunits, collectively, of the Na+,K+-pump. Taken together, the findings of this study reveal that LPS hyperpolarizes the airway epithelium by increasing the activities of ENaC and the Na+,K+-pump. ENaC activation by LPS is not accomplished via a change in ENaC regulation involving proteolytic cleavage. LPS increases Na+ transport downstream of the genetic level, in part, by stimulating the expression of the Na+,K+-pum

R2,048

Or split into 4x interest-free payments of 25% on orders over R50
Learn more

Discovery Miles20480
Mobicred@R192pm x 12* Mobicred Info
Free Delivery
Delivery AdviceOut of stock

Toggle WishListAdd to wish list
Review this Item

Product Description

PMOur laboratory found that systemic administration of lipopolysaccharide (LPS; 4 mg/kg) hyperpolarized the transepithelial potential difference (V t) of tracheal epithelium in the isolated, perfused trachea (IPT) of the guinea pig 18 h after injection. We hypothesized that LPS stimulates the transepithelial movement of Na+ via the epithelial sodium channel (ENaC)/Na+,K+-pump axis, leading to hyperpolarization of Vt. LPS increased the Vt response to amiloride, i.e., offset the effect of LPS, indicating that Na+ transport was increased. The functional activity of ENaC was measured in the IPT after short-circuiting the Na+,K+-pump with basolateral amphotericin B. LPS had no effect on the hyperpolarization response to apical trypsin in the Ussing chamber, indicating that channel activating proteases are not involved in the LPS-induced activation of ENaC. To assess Na+,K +-pump activity in the IPT, ENaC was short-circuited with apical amphotericin B. The greater Vt in the presence of amphotericin B in tracheas from LPS-treated animals compared to controls revealed that LPS increased Na+,K+-pump activity. This finding was confirmed in the Ussing chamber by inhibiting the Na+,K+-pump via extracellular K+ removal, loading the epithelium with Na +, and observing a greater hyperpolarization response to K + restoration. Using qPCR, the effects of LPS on the transcription of alphaENaC, alpha1 Na+,K+-pump, COX-2, eNOS, iNOS, IL-1beta, and TNF-alpha were measured at 3 and 18 h. In the epithelium, LPS increased the transcription of COX-2, IL-1beta, and, to nonsignificant extent, TNF-alpha at 3 h, but not at 18 h. In alveolar macrophages, TNF-alpha, and, to a nonsignificant extent, COX-2 and IL-1beta were up-regulated at 3 h, but not at 18 h. Even though LPS stimulated the transcription of some genes, alphaENaC and alpha1 Na +,K+-ATPase transcription were not affected. The expression of alpha-, beta-, and gamma-ENaC and alpha1 Na+,K+-pump from tracheal epithelium and kidney cortex/medulla were investigated by western blotting. All three ENaC subunits were detected as cleavage fragments, yet LPS had no effect on their expression. LPS increased the expression of the alpha1 subunit and the alpha 1-, alpha2-, and alpha3-subunits, collectively, of the Na+,K+-pump. Taken together, the findings of this study reveal that LPS hyperpolarizes the airway epithelium by increasing the activities of ENaC and the Na+,K+-pump. ENaC activation by LPS is not accomplished via a change in ENaC regulation involving proteolytic cleavage. LPS increases Na+ transport downstream of the genetic level, in part, by stimulating the expression of the Na+,K+-pum

Customer Reviews

No reviews or ratings yet - be the first to create one!

Product Details

General

Imprint

Proquest, Umi Dissertation Publishing

Country of origin

United States

Release date

September 2011

Availability

Supplier out of stock. If you add this item to your wish list we will let you know when it becomes available.

First published

September 2011

Authors

Dimensions

254 x 203 x 12mm (L x W x T)

Format

Paperback - Trade

Pages

176

ISBN-13

978-1-244-58091-6

Barcode

9781244580916

Categories

LSN

1-244-58091-0



Trending On Loot