Mesenchymal cells isolated after acute lung injury manifest an enhanced proliferative phenotype.
Open Access
- 1 November 1992
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Clinical Investigation in Journal of Clinical Investigation
- Vol. 90 (5) , 1778-1785
- https://doi.org/10.1172/jci116052
Abstract
After acute lung injury, mesenchymal cells migrate into the alveolar airspace where they proliferate and deposit connective tissue macromolecules. Early in the disease process, inflammatory cell-derived trophic factors modulate these mesenchymal cell functions. However, in those patients who die, even as the inflammatory response abates, the fibroproliferative response continues, resulting in extensive intraalveolar fibrosis. We therefore hypothesized that lung mesenchymal cells obtained from individuals dying with acute alveolar fibrosis would manifest an enhanced proliferative capacity that was independent of persistent exogenous signals. To examine this hypothesis, the in vitro growth properties of mesenchymal cells prepared from patients dying with acute lung injury (n = 3) were analyzed in defined medium and compared with those of mesenchymal cells similarly prepared from patients dying with histologically normal lungs (n = 3). Isolates were characterized as mesenchymal cells by using morphological and immunohistochemical criteria. In accord with the hypothesis, mesenchymal cells isolated from lung-injured patients doubled within 3 d in the complete absence of exogenous peptide growth factors, reaching a saturation density of approximately 15 x 10(3) cells/cm2. As expected, lung mesenchymal cells from normal individuals failed to significantly increase in number. Consistent with this proliferative phenotype, the immediate early cell division cycle genes c-fos and c-jun were constitutively expressed in each cell strain prepared from injured lungs, but not in those from control lungs. The observed proliferative phenotype was stable through the fifth subcultivation of the cells. Despite these proliferative properties, three separate criteria indicated the mesenchymal cells from injured lungs were not transformed: normal karyotype; finite lifespan in vitro (9-10 subcultivations); and inability to disseminate in mice with severe combined immunodeficiency. These data support the hypothesis that mesenchymal cells manifest an enhanced proliferative state after acute lung injury.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Identification and partial characterization of angiogenesis bioactivity in the lower respiratory tract after acute lung injury.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1991
- Acute lung injury. Pathogenesis of intraalveolar fibrosis.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1991
- Characterization of human neutrophil ecto-protein kinase activity released by kinase substrates.The Journal of Immunology, 1991
- MORPHOLOGY AND INCREASED GROWTH-RATE OF ATHEROSCLEROTIC INTIMAL SMOOTH-MUSCLE CELLS1988
- Acute interstitial pneumonia. A clinicopathologic, ultrastructural, and cell kinetic study.1986
- ADULT RESPIRATORY-DISTRESS SYNDROME - PROGNOSIS AFTER ONSETPublished by Elsevier ,1985
- A simple method of reducing the fading of immunofluorescence during microscopyJournal of Immunological Methods, 1981
- Use of avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex (ABC) in immunoperoxidase techniques: a comparison between ABC and unlabeled antibody (PAP) procedures.Journal of Histochemistry & Cytochemistry, 1981
- Evidence for a Monoclonal Origin of Human Atherosclerotic PlaquesProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1973
- Fine Structural Alterations Induced in Platelets by Adenosine DiphosphateBlood, 1968