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Medical Research Council Centre for Developmental Neurobiology, King's College London, London, UK
CORRESPONDENCE: M. Maden, MRC Centre for Developmental Neurobiology, 4th floor New Hunt's House, King's College London, Guy's Campus, London Bridge, London, SE1 1UL, UK. Fax: 44 2078486798. E-mail: malcolm.maden@kcl.ac.uk
Keywords: alveolar regeneration, dexamethasone, lung, mouse, regeneration, retinoic acid
Received: December 19, 2002
Accepted August 14, 2003
This work was funded by The Wellcome Trust via a Wellcome Trust Research Training Fellowship to M. Hind.
| Abstract |
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Here, additional evidence that RA is required during alveologenesis in the mouse is provided by showing that disulphiram disrupts this process. A further model of disrupted alveolar development using dexamethasone administered postnatally is then described, and it is further shown that RA administered to these adult mice restores the lung architecture to normal.
Alveolar regeneration with retinoic acid may therefore be an important novel therapeutic approach to the treatment of respiratory diseases characterised by a reduced gas-exchanging surface area, such as bronchopulmonary dysplasia and emphysema.
The ability of adult mammals to regenerate organs seems tobe limited to only one, the liver, apart from the unique phenomenon of antler regeneration in deer. This is in striking contrast to the remarkable abilities of the Urodele amphibians where limbs, tails, jaws, spinal cords, forebrain, lens, retina and gills can all regenerate 1. However, on a tissue rather than a whole organ level mammals can, of course, continually replace their epidermis, gut endoderm and blood cells. With the discovery of neural stem cells 2, neurones may also be included in this regenerative tissue category.
Perhaps, therefore, there may be a greater regenerative ability present in mammals than has hitherto been realised. An excellent example of this is the adult mammalian lung. It was recently discovered that retinoic acid (RA) can induce the regeneration of lung alveoli in the experimentally damaged adult rat lung 3. The experimental damage induced was the instillation of elastase into the trachea, which destroys the alveoli, resulting in a vastly reduced gas-exchanging surface area (SA) and this was developed as a model for the human disease of emphysema. This effect of RA was also seen in the tight-skin mutant mouse, which has a genetic failure of alveolar development, and in postnatal rats treated with dexamethasone (Dex) 3.
It would have a dramatic impact on human health if RA induced alveolar regeneration in human diseased lungs that have decreased gas-exchanging SA, such as those displaying emphysema. Emphysema and chronic bronchitis together comprise the clinical syndrome of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) that is predicted to become the third commonest cause of death worldwide by 2020 4. Currently, there are no effective treatments for COPD save supplemental oxygen and lung transplantation, and the outlook for affected patients isbleak 5. However, subsequent studies on RA-induced alveolar regeneration have not confirmed these striking results. Some have shown only a partial rescue of alveolar SA in elastase-treated rats 6, 7, and others have reported no effect of RA at all 8, 9. In the work reported here, a mouse model for regeneration studies using Dex, which inhibits alveologenesis, administered during the period of alveologenesis is described. Subsequent RA treatment of these mice, when adults, rescues the deleterious effects of Dex and induces histological regeneration of the lung structure, thus confirming the data of Massaro and Massaro 3.
It is interesting to consider why RA may have such an effect on an adult tissue, since it is primarily known for its important role as a signalling molecule in several developing systems 1012. This concept implies that RA should be crucially involved in alveologenesis in the first place and indeed, this seems to be the case. Retinoids are readily detectable by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) in the postnatal lung 1315, the RA-synthesising enzymes, receptors and cytoplasmic-binding proteins are present 14, 1618, and mice made mutant for the retinoic acid receptor
gene fail to form alveoli correctly 19. In the work described here, studies on the role of RA during mouse alveologenesis are continued by showing that disulphiram, a compound that inhibits RA synthesis, inhibits alveologenesis.
| Materials and methods |
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Dosing
Disulphiram (Sigma, Poole, UK) was dissolved in dimethylsulphoxide (DMSO; Sigma) and peanut oil (vehicle) at a concentration of 2.5 mg·kg1 and given as an intraperitoneal injection of 10 µL daily for 10 days from P214 with a 2-day break on P8 and P9. Controls received the vehicle only. Disulphiram and control animals were killed at P23. Dex (Sigma) was dissolved in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) and given as a 10-µL subcutaneous injection at three different doses to three groups of animals. The doses were 0.05, 0.2 and 0.4 mg·kg1 and they were administered for 10 days from P214 with a 2-day break on P8 and P9. Controls received only PBS injections. Animals were killed at two time points, P30 and P90. All-trans-RA (Sigma) was dissolved in DMSO and peanut oil (Sigma) at a dose of 2 mg·kg1 and was administered as a 50-µL intraperitoneal injection for a period of 10 days from P4254 with a 2-day break on P48 and P49. Controls received DMSO/peanut oil only. Controls and RA-treated animals were killed at P90.
Histology
In all cases the lungs were carefully removed from the thorax and intubated with a 22-gauge cannula. The lungs were inflated to a standard pressure of 20 cmH20 with 4% paraformaldehyde, after which the trachea was ligated and the tissues placed in 4% paraformaldehyde for 48 h. The tissues were briefly placed in 30% alcohol and lung volumes calculated by fluid displacement. The lungs were then processed, embedded in paraffin wax, and 5-µm sections were stained with haematoxylin and eosin and examined by light microscopy.
Morphometry
Sections were analysed on a light microscope linked to a digital imaging system. Images were acquired at 10x objective and processed using ImageProPlus analysis software (DataCell Ltd, Finchampstead, UK). Large nonalveolar structures (e.g. blood vessels) were removed from the image and the mean chord length (Lm) calculated. Each section produced at least five nonoverlapping fields and at least 10 sections were analysed for each animal resulting in at least 50 nonoverlapping fields. This produced a 95% confidence interval of ±5% of the mean. Following Weibel 20, knowledge of the Lm and lung volume allows gas-exchanging SA to be calculated. All data are expressed as mean±sem.
High-performance liquid chromatography analysis
Retinoids were extracted from 200500 mg of lung tissue according to the method of Thaller and Eichele 21 by homogenising the tissue in 1 mL of stabilising solution (5 mg·mL1 ascorbic acid, sodium ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid in PBS, pH 7.3). The homogenate was extracted twice with two volumes of 1:8 methyl acetate/ethyl acetate, with butylated hydroxytoluene as an antioxidant, and then dried down over nitrogen. The extract was resuspended in 100 µL methanol, centrifuged at high speed to remove any particulate matter and placed into an autosampler vial for analysis.
Reverse-phase HPLC was performed using a Beckman System Gold Hardware (Beckman, High Wycombe, UK) with a photodiode array detector and a 5 µm C18 LiChrocart column (Merck) with an equivalent precolumn. The mobile phases used were those of Achkar et al. 22, which allows agood separation of the RAs and retinols. The flow rate was 1.5 mL·min1 using a gradient of acetonitrile/ammonium acetate (15 mM, pH 6.5) from 4067% acetonitrile in 35 min followed by 100% acetonitrile for an additional 25 min. Individual retinoids could be identified according to their ultraviolet absorption spectra.
| Results |
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A group of six mice pups was treated with disulphiram during the period of maximum alveolar proliferation, from P214. A group of seven pups was treated with PBS only (controls). Disulphiram treatment resulted in the disruption of normal alveolar formation. At P23, the disulphiram-treated animals had fewer, larger alveoli and there was no evidence of secondary septae formation (fig. 1
). It was also noticeable that the alveolar walls were thicker than normal which, together with the lack of secondary septae are features of an architecturally immature lung (fig. 1
). When this effect was quantified using morphometry (fig. 1c
), it was clear that disulphiram treatment during alveolar formation resulted in a significant increase in Lm (p<0.01) at P23, suggesting RA is required for normal alveologenesis. These results support earlier studies that demonstrated that disruption of RA signalling by mutating the RA receptor
19 is associated with abnormal alveolar formation.
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Exogenous retinoic acid rescues the dexamethasone-treated adult lung
Knowing that Dex treatment is permanent and that intraperitoneal RA will rapidly travel to the lung, the effect of RA on alveolar structure could now be examined. Groups (n=78) of adult mice that had been treated with Dex from P214 were dosed with either RA in oil or oil only from P3042. The animals were killed at P90 and their lungs removed for morphometric analysis. Calculating the Lm by intersection counting and the lung volume by displacement measurement, can derive the SA 20. SA was normalised to body weight to eliminate the effect of body weight on alveolar number and to permit valid comparisons between individual animals and between control and Dex-treated groups. Dex dosing from P224 resulted in a significant (p<0.01) decrease in body weight at P90 (fig. 5e
). RA had no significant effect on body weight (fig. 5e
). Dex treatment appeared to increase lung volumes but this was not statistically significant (fig. 5f
). Dex dosing resulted in a significantly increased (p<0.01) Lm at P90 (fig. 5g
) reflecting fewer, larger airspaces as shown in figure 5c
versus figure 5b
. The Lm in the Dex/RA group was significantly lower (p<0.01) than the Dex-only group (fig. 5g
) suggesting that RA restored Lm toward control values. Dex treatment results in a significantly reduced (p<0.01) SA per 100 g (fig. 5h
), and RA restored the SA per 100 g such that there was no significant difference between the control group and the Dex/RA group. Therefore, RA restored the SA/body weight of these Dex-treated animals.
The data in figures 5eh
are from pooled groups of male and female mice. The morphometric data from this experiment are presented in table 1
with separate male and female data. It can be seen here that differences between males and females can readily be detected within groups in terms of body weight, Lm and gas-exchanging SA per 100 g body weight. However, when the data are analysed separately in this way the result is the same for both males and females, i.e. RA restores the Dex-treated gas-exchanging surface to normal.
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| Discussion |
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Several lines of evidence suggest that lipofibroblasts may be a potential target of exogenous RA in the regenerating lung. It has been demonstrated that lipofibroblasts are present in the lung during alveologenesis 3034 and that they undergo significant numerical changes during this period 29, 35, 36. These cells are the retinoid storage cells of the lung 37 similar to the Ito cell or stellate cell in the liver. Furthermore, lipofibroblasts are a major source of tropoelastin synthesis 34 and they can synthesise tropoelastin in response to RA 15. Interestingly, ultrastructural analysis has demonstrated that lipofibroblasts are often in close contact with type-II pneumocytes 38, which can be considered as a lung progenitor cell population and a potential source of type-I cells. Type-II cells are known to also possess the RA signal transduction components 39 so it is possible that the type-II cell may also be involved in the coordinated eruption of a developing alveolar septa. Another interesting possibility is that a circulating "stem cell" population may exist, on which RA may act to seed the damaged lung. Recent evidence suggests that following damage, lung epithelium can be repopulated by a bone marrow-derived multipotent stem cell 40, 41. These two scenarios as a source of the regenerated cells can now be tested with the appropriate transgenic mouse strains.
The hypothesis that an organ regenerates using the same gene pathways that it used during development is a common one in regenerative biology. In the case of the lung, the present authors and others have provided much data to demonstrate that RA is required for alveolar development. Alveoli develop postnatally in rats, mice and humans and here it is shown that when disulphiram is administered to newborn mice, alveologenesis is inhibited. Although it is clear that disulphiram is not a specific inhibitor of RA synthesis, since italso inhibits other enzymes, this evidence along with the previous demonstration of the presence of the RA-synthesising enzymes RALDH1 and RALDH2, the retinoid-binding proteins CRBP I, CRBP II and cellular retinoic acid-binding protein I, the retinoic acid-receptor isoforms RAR
1, RAR
2, RARß4 and RAR
2, and the presence of retinol and RA themselves 13, 14, 1618, provides strong support for the notion that RA is indeed required for alveologenesis. Other supporting evidence includes the fact that citral, another aldehyde dehydrogenase inhibitor disrupts tropoelastin mRNA and elastin levels 15 and the RAR
null mutant mouse fails to form alveoli correctly 19.
In order to examine the regeneration of alveoli, a robust and repeatable model of either alveolar destruction or disrupted development was required with which to assay the effect of RA. Dex treatment was shown to inhibit alveolar development and these animals had fewer, larger alveoli and a reduced gas-exchanging SA. The effect on alveolar architecture remained obvious for at least 150 days. Recent work by Tschanz et al. 42 has suggested that rat lungs can recover from glucocorticoid adminstration by day 60, but in this case the treatment time was shorter than that used here. Indeed, in the present work, the effect of Dex could be titrated by varying either the dose or duration of dosing. It is possible that Dex has its effect by affecting RA itself or a component of the RA signalling pathway. Previous studies in neonatal rats treated with Dex have demonstrated that there is a reduction in RARß 43 and CRBP I 44. Since both of these genes contain a RARE, this result may reflect the affect of Dex on RA levels. Furthermore, there is an imperfect glucocorticoid response element within 1 kb of the start site of thehuman Aldh-1 gene suggesting that Dex could directly regulate Aldh-1 transcription. Alternatively, there are many other potential sites for interaction between Dex and RA, since both retinoids and glucocorticoids act via nuclear receptors of the same superfamily.
Finally, it was shown that when RA was delivered intraperitoneally it reached the lung within 5 min, still as all-trans-RA, followed by a rapid decline and after 4 h the levels in both blood and lung had returned to normal adult levels. In retinol-deprived rats, both RARß 27 and CRBP I 26 mRNA were rapidly induced, in 4 h and in 1 h, respectively, in lung tissue following systemic RA.
These data demonstrate that exogenous retinoic acid is rapidly delivered, it is not metabolised to other compounds and that retinoic acid-responsive genes are activated in the lung following systemic dosing. The important question thatmust now be answered in an effort to understand the molecular basis of this regenerative phenomenon is what are the other genes that retinoic acid activates in the lung? These retinoic acid pathway genes, retinoic acid receptor-ß and cellular retinol-binding protein I, are presumably immediate retinoic acid targets. Genes, such as tropoelastin, whose protein elastin is the major structural component of the alveolus and that is known to be regulated by retinoic acid 45, are likely to be final downstream targets. It is what lies in between these two that is the interesting question, which hopefully will be answered in the near future.
| Footnotes |
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