Acute lung injury with endotoxin or NO2 does not enhance development of airway epithelium from bone marrow

Travis Beckett, Roberto Loi, Robert Prenovitz, Matthew Poynter, Kaarin K. Goncz, Benjamin T. Suratt, Daniel J. Weiss

Producción científica: Contribución a una revistaArtículorevisión exhaustiva

42 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

Adult marrow-derived stem cells can localize to lung and acquire immunophenotypic characteristics of lung epithelial cells. Lung injury increases recruitment of the marrow-derived cells. We speculated that comparing patterns of lung engraftment following different lung injuries would provide insight into potential mechanisms by which marrow-derived cells were recruited to lung. To evaluate this, adult female C57Bl/6 mice irradiated and engrafted with marrow from adult male transgenic GFP mice were exposed to either intranasal inhalation of endotoxin (25 μg/ mouse) or 3 days of 25 ppm NO2 and then compared 1 or 3 months later to transplanted but otherwise uninjured mice. In all cases, the majority of marrow-derived cells recruited to lung were CD45+ leukocytes. In lungs of transplanted but otherwise uninjured mice, small numbers of CD45- donor-derived cells in alveolar septae stained positively for pro-surfactant protein C. Rare donor-derived cells located in the airway epithelium stained positively with cytokeratin. Subsequent exposure of engrafted mice to NO2 or endotoxin did not significantly increase the number or pattern of donor-derived CD45- cells found in recipient lungs. These results suggest that NO2 or endotoxin lung injury does not result in significant engraftment of marrow-derived cells in lung.

Idioma originalInglés
Páginas (desde-hasta)680-686
Número de páginas7
PublicaciónMolecular Therapy
Volumen12
N.º4
DOI
EstadoPublicada - oct. 2005
Publicado de forma externa

Huella

Profundice en los temas de investigación de 'Acute lung injury with endotoxin or NO2 does not enhance development of airway epithelium from bone marrow'. En conjunto forman una huella única.

Citar esto