Publication | Closed Access
Surfactant Apoprotein A (SP-A) Is Synthesized in Airway Cells
139
Citations
22
References
1990
Year
AsthmaProteinlipid InteractionType IiType Ii CellsPulmonary SurfactantAllergyBiochemistryLung InflammationMedicineNatural SciencesLung DepositionSurfactant Apoprotein ACellular BiochemistryPharmacologyCell BiologyLung CancerPulmonary Disease
The pulmonary surfactant apoproteins A, B, and C (SP-A, SP-B, and SP-C, respectively) function in concert with surfactant phospholipids to reduce surface pressure in the alveolus. Surfactant apoproteins also regulate surfactant synthesis, secretion, adsorption, and recycling. SP-A and B have been localized by immunocytochemistry to alveolar epithelial (type II) cells, alveolar macrophages, and nonciliated bronchiolar epithelial (Clara) cells. In contrast, in situ hybridization to SP-A and B mRNA in human lung has shown SP-A and B transcripts in type II cells, but only SP-B message in Clara cells, implying that synthesis of SP-A occurs exclusively in type II cells. In this report, in situ hybridization to SP-A mRNA was performed on adult and developing rabbit lung and on human lung. SP-A transcripts were found in type II cells and bronchiolar epithelium of both species. The distribution of SP-A message-containing cells in the bronchiolar epithelium of rabbits and humans was similar to the distribution of Clara cells in these two species. These data indicate that SP-A is not only synthesized in type II cells but also in Clara cells.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1