Immunogenicity of surfactant. I. Human alveolar surfactant

Abstract
The immunogenicity of lung surfactant derived from amniotic fluid has been well established. We have set out to examine the antigenic similarity of human surfactant to non-human alveolar surfactants currently being used therapeutically in clinical trials with neonatal respiratory distress syndrome. To this end, we raised a series of eight monoclonal antibodies in rats directed to human surfactant (H1 to H8). All antibodies bound human surfactant as measured by ELISA. Four of these monoclonal antibodies bound surfactant components by Western blot analysis: all bound a 9-10-kD species. In addition, one antibody (H2) bound a protein of 16 kD, one (H8) a 6-kD protein, and one (H6) a 30-kD protein. When mixed with surfactant, three antibodies, H4, H7 and H8, profoundly altered surfactant activity in vitro in the pulsating bubble surfactometer. Three other antibodies, H1, H2, and H5 moderately inhibited surfactant's surface activity. We also examined the cross-reactivity of these monoclonal antibodies with bovine (CLSE) and porcine (Curosurf) surfactants. By Western blot analysis, only H6 bound these heterologous surfactants. Other antibodies did so by ELISA. However, functional assays indicated that antibodies H7, H8 and H4 all greatly inhibited CLSE surface activity in vitro. Five antibodies (H1-H4 and H8) inhibited Curosurf function. Thus, human surfactant species, especially low molecular weight species, are highly antigenic. Antibodies to alveolar surfactants may inhibit surfactant function in vitro. As indicated by Western blot and cross-inhibition data, human lower molecular weight surfactants share epitopes with proteins from therapeutically important porcine and bovine surfactants. The potential importance of these findings to treatment of neonatal respiratory distress syndrome with heterologous surfactants is discussed.

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