Localization and stretch-dependence of lung elastase activity in development and compensatory growth

SM Young, S Liu, R Joshi, MR Batie… - Journal of applied …, 2015 - journals.physiology.org
SM Young, S Liu, R Joshi, MR Batie, M Kofron, J Guo, JC Woods, BM Varisco
Journal of applied physiology, 2015journals.physiology.org
Synthesis and remodeling of the lung matrix is necessary for primary and compensatory
lung growth. Because cyclic negative force is applied to developing lung tissue during the
respiratory cycle, we hypothesized that stretch is a critical regulator of lung matrix
remodeling. By using quantitative image analysis of whole-lung and whole-lobe elastin in
situ zymography images, we demonstrated that elastase activity increased twofold during
the alveolar stage of postnatal lung morphogenesis in the mouse. Remodeling was …
Synthesis and remodeling of the lung matrix is necessary for primary and compensatory lung growth. Because cyclic negative force is applied to developing lung tissue during the respiratory cycle, we hypothesized that stretch is a critical regulator of lung matrix remodeling. By using quantitative image analysis of whole-lung and whole-lobe elastin in situ zymography images, we demonstrated that elastase activity increased twofold during the alveolar stage of postnatal lung morphogenesis in the mouse. Remodeling was restricted to alveolar walls and ducts and was nearly absent in dense elastin band structures. In the mouse pneumonectomy model of compensatory lung growth, elastase activity increased threefold, peaking at 14 days postpneumonectomy and was higher in the accessory lobe compared with other lobes. Remodeling during normal development and during compensatory lung growth was different with increased major airway and pulmonary arterial remodeling during development but not regeneration, and with homogenous remodeling throughout the parenchyma during development, but increased remodeling only in subpleural regions during compensatory lung growth. Left lung wax plombage prevented increased lung elastin during compensatory lung growth. To test whether the adult lung retains an innate capacity to remodel elastin, we developed a confocal microscope-compatible stretching device. In ex vivo adult mouse lung sections, lung elastase activity increased exponentially with strain and in peripheral regions of lung more than in central regions. Our study demonstrates that lung elastase activity is stretch-dependent and supports a model in which externally applied forces influence the composition, structure, and function of the matrix during periods of alveolar septation.
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