scholarly journals Lung developmental arrest caused by PDGF-A deletion: consequences for the adult mouse lung

2020 ◽  
Vol 318 (4) ◽  
pp. L831-L843
Author(s):  
Leonor Gouveia ◽  
Simone Kraut ◽  
Stefan Hadzic ◽  
Elisa Vazquéz-Liébanas ◽  
Baktybek Kojonazarov ◽  
...  

PDGF-A is a key contributor to lung development in mice. Its expression is needed for secondary septation of the alveoli and deletion of the gene leads to abnormally enlarged alveolar air spaces in mice. In humans, the same phenotype is the hallmark of bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD), a disease that affects premature babies and may have long lasting consequences in adulthood. So far, the knowledge regarding adult effects of developmental arrest in the lung is limited. This is attributable to few follow-up studies of BPD survivors and lack of good experimental models that could help predict the outcomes of this early age disease for the adult individual. In this study, we used the constitutive lung-specific Pdgfa deletion mouse model to analyze the consequences of developmental lung defects in adult mice. We assessed lung morphology, physiology, cellular content, ECM composition and proteomics data in mature mice, that perinatally exhibited lungs with a BPD-like morphology. Histological and physiological analyses both revealed that enlarged alveolar air spaces remained until adulthood, resulting in higher lung compliance and higher respiratory volume in knockout mice. Still, no or only small differences were seen in cellular, ECM and protein content when comparing knockout and control mice. Taken together, our results indicate that Pdgfa deletion-induced lung developmental arrest has consequences for the adult lung at the morphological and functional level. In addition, these mice can reach adulthood with a BPD-like phenotype, which makes them a robust model to further investigate the pathophysiological progression of the disease and test putative regenerative therapies.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jamie L. McCall ◽  
Harry C. Blair ◽  
Kathryn Blethen ◽  
Casey Hall ◽  
Meenal Elliott ◽  
...  

We previously demonstrated that exposure of adult mice to environmental levels of cadmium (Cd) alters the immune cell development and function with increases in anti-streptococcal antibody levels, as well as decreases in splenic natural regulatory T cells (nTreg) in the adult female offspring. Based on these data, we hypothesized that prenatal Cd exposure could predispose an individual to developing autoimmunity as adults. To test this hypothesis, the effects of prenatal Cd on the development of autoimmune diabetes and arthritis were investigated. Non-obese diabetic (NOD) mice were exposed to Cd in a manner identical to our previous studies, and the onset of diabetes was assessed in the offspring. Our results showed a similar time-to-onset and severity of disease to historical data, and there were no statistical differences between Cd-exposed and control offspring. Numerous other immune parameters were measured and none of these parameters showed biologically relevant differences between Cd-exposed and control animals. To test whether prenatal Cd-exposure affected development of autoimmune arthritis, we used SKG mice. While the levels of arthritis were similar between Cd-exposed and control offspring of both sexes, the pathology of arthritis determined by micro-computed tomography (microCT) between Cd-exposed and control animals, showed some statistically different values, especially in the female offspring. However, the differences were small and thus, the biological significance of these changes is open to speculation. Overall, based on the results from two autoimmune models, we conclude that prenatal exposure to Cd did not lead to a measurable propensity to develop autoimmune disease later in life.


2009 ◽  
Vol 297 (4) ◽  
pp. L641-L649 ◽  
Author(s):  
Min Yee ◽  
Patricia R. Chess ◽  
Sharon A. McGrath-Morrow ◽  
Zhengdong Wang ◽  
Robert Gelein ◽  
...  

Despite its potentially adverse effects on lung development and function, supplemental oxygen is often used to treat premature infants in respiratory distress. To understand how neonatal hyperoxia can permanently disrupt lung development, we previously reported increased lung compliance, greater alveolar simplification, and disrupted epithelial development in adult mice exposed to 100% inspired oxygen fraction between postnatal days 1 and 4. Here, we investigate whether oxygen-induced changes in lung function are attributable to defects in surfactant composition and activity, structural changes in alveolar development, or both. Newborn mice were exposed to room air or 40%, 60%, 80%, or 100% oxygen between postnatal days 1 and 4 and allowed to recover in room air until 8 wk of age. Lung compliance and alveolar size increased, and airway resistance, airway elastance, tissue elastance, and tissue damping decreased, in mice exposed to 60–80% oxygen; changes were even greater in mice exposed to 100% oxygen. These alterations in lung function were not associated with changes in total protein content or surfactant phospholipid composition in bronchoalveolar lavage. Moreover, surface activity and total and hydrophobic protein content were unchanged in large surfactant aggregates centrifuged from bronchoalveolar lavage compared with control. Instead, the number of type II cells progressively declined in 60–100% oxygen, whereas levels of T1α, a protein expressed by type I cells, were comparably increased in mice exposed to 40–100% oxygen. Thickened bundles of elastin fibers were also detected in alveolar walls of mice exposed to ≥60% oxygen. These findings support the hypothesis that changes in lung development, rather than surfactant activity, are the primary causes of oxygen-altered lung function in children who were exposed to oxygen as neonates. Furthermore, the disruptive effects of oxygen on epithelial development and lung mechanics are not equivalently dose dependent.


2010 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 32-37 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chunhua Yu ◽  
Jin Wang ◽  
Yan Fu ◽  
Yongqiu Mao ◽  
Yongshun Chen ◽  
...  

Background and objective: A murine model of skin injury from vinorelbine extravasation was established to evaluate the treatment efficacy of basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) and recombinant human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (rhGM-CSF). Materials and method: Experimental models were divided into bFGF, rhGM-CSF, and control (saline) groups, with 40 mice in each group. Edema and ulceration were measured on Days 1, 3, 5, 7, 10, 14, and 18 after the onset of extravasation; injuries were examined pathomorphologically in three mice/group/time point. Results: Edema reached maximum size on Day 3 in the bFGF and rhGM-CSF groups and Day 5 in the control group. The difference between the two experimental groups was not significant; differences between the control group and the experimental groups were statistically significant at all time points. Edema and ulceration began to improve on Day 10 in the bFGF and rhGM-CSF groups and Day 18 in the control group. Healing duration was 14—18 days in the experimental groups, with a (not significantly) shorter duration in the bFGF group. Healing was completed by Day 27.5 in the control group. Pathomorphological evaluation showed regular reepithelization and newly formed granulation tissue in the bFGF and rhGM-CSF groups on Day 13. In the control group, wounds were partially healed, edema and shallow ulcers existed, and epithelization was fragile and disorganized on Day 18. Conclusions: bFGF and rhGM-CSF are useful for the treatment of skin injury due to vinorelbine extravasation, but bFGF may be slightly more effective in decreasing time and improving quality of healing.


1979 ◽  
Vol 47 (2) ◽  
pp. 418-424 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. W. Ramsdell ◽  
P. F. Georghiou

We studied the effect of prolonged airways obstruction induced by extended cholinergic stimulation in five anesthetized, mechanically ventilated dogs. A continuous intravenous metacholine infusion was utilized to maintain pulmonary resistance (RL) at 200--1500% preinfusion levels for 13--23 h. At maximum RL (18.86 +/- 7.74 vs. 2.09 +/- 0.18 (mean +/- SD) cmH2O/ (L/S) PREINfusion; P less than 0.01), dynamic lung compliance (Cdyn) fell from 67.5 +/- 14.6 to 32.7 +/- 11.6 ml/cmH2O (P less than 0.005) and arterial partial pressure of oxygen (PaO2) fell modestly from 95.8 +/- 6.1 Torr preinfusion to 83.2 +/- 12.7 Torr (P less than 0.05). Tachyphylaxis to methacholine developed, requiring increases in infusion rates to maintain elevated RL. Abnormalities in lung function resolved promptly upon termination of the infusion. Two similarly instrumented control animals ventilated for 19 and 25 h without metacholine infusion had no change in RL, Cdyn, or PaO2. Histological examination of the lungs revealed no differences between infused and control animals. In spite of marked increases in RL, prolonged cholinergic stimulation produced only mild changes in gas exchange and no sustained changes in lung function or structure.


2017 ◽  
Vol 2017 ◽  
pp. 1-5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carolina Aguirre ◽  
Valeska Castillo ◽  
Miguel Llanos

We have previously shown that administration of the endocannabinoid anandamide (AEA) during lactation leads to overweight, increased body fat accumulation, and insulin resistance in adult mice. This study was designed to elucidate if these effects are due to increased food intake, stimulated by an augmented abundance and binding ability of the hypothalamic cannabinoid type 1 receptor (CB1R). With this aim, male mice pups were treated with a daily oral dose of AEA during lactation. Adult mice were also treated with a single oral dose of AEA, to evaluate acute food intake during 4 h. At 21 and 160 days, CB1R protein abundance was calculated by western blot analysis. Capacity of hypothalamic membranes to specifically bind the radioligand3[H]-CP55.940 was also measured. Western blots showed a 72% increase in CB1R abundance in AEA-treated 21-day-old mice, without differences in adult mice. Additionally, specific binding of3[H]-CP55.940 to hypothalamic membranes from adult mice was significantly lower in those mice treated with AEA during lactation. Moreover, AEA did not stimulate acute food intake in both, AEA-treated and control mice. Results suggest that metabolic alterations found in adult mice because of AEA treatment during lactation are not associated with hypothalamic CB1R.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 3567-3567
Author(s):  
Tatiana Ulyanova ◽  
Gregory V. Priestley ◽  
Yi Jiang ◽  
Stephen Padilla ◽  
Thalia Papayannopoulou

Abstract Previous experiments in vitro have emphasized the important role of a5b1 integrin/fibronectin interactions in terminal stages of erythroid differentiation (JCB1987, 105:3105), whereas in vivo experiments with genetically deficient mice (JI2000, 165:4667) and recent in vitro ones emphasized the important contribution of a4b1 integrin in the expansion of fetal erythroid progenitors (JCB2007, 177:871) or for optimal responses post stress in adult animals (MCB2003, 23:9349). However, no abnormalities in erythropoiesis were reported in a model of conditional ablation of b1 integrins post-transplantation (Blood2006, 108:1857). Therefore, it has not been clear to what extent each of the two major b1 integrins (a4b1 and a5b1) alone or in combination is critical for expansion and/or terminal erythroid differentiation of adult cells at homeostasis and/or after stress. We have made detailed and parallel observations comparing erythropoiesis in two genetic models with conditional ablation of b1 or a4 integrins at homeostasis and after phenylhydrazine (PHZ)-mediated stress. Basal erythropoiesis in b1-, a4-deficient and control mice as assessed by hematocrit levels and total nucleated erythroid cells (Ter119+) in BM and spleen was similar. Furthermore, both b1 and a4-deficient mice showed an increase in circulating progenitors (1275±230 CFC/ml PB, 2446±256 CFC/ml PB, respectively) over controls (338±113 CFC/ml PB). However, post PHZ-induced hemolytic stress there was a dramatic difference in outcomes of b1-deficient, but modest differences in a4-deficient mice compared to controls. Survival of b1-deficient mice by day 6 post PHZ was 33% compared to 100% in a4-deficient and control groups. In b1-deficient animals, no significant increase in spleen cellularity (153±26×106 and194±64×106 cells/spleen at day 0 and 6 post PHZ, respectively) was detected and the expansion of total erythroid precursors (CD71hi,Ter119+) in the spleen was minimal (from 2.08×106 to 10.8×106 cells/spleen at day 6). In contrast, in a4-deficient and control mice by the same time spleen cellularity increased respectively by 3 and 8 fold, and erythroid precursors expanded by 400 and 2,500 fold. Of interest, BM response to PHZ was not significantly different among all groups. To test whether the splenic response was cell-autonomous or environmentally controlled we compared PHZ response in wild type recipients reconstituted with b1-ablated (Cre+b1D/D) or with control (Cre-b1f/f) BM cells. Recipients of b1-ablated cells had an impaired response compared to recipients of control cells, which was somewhat intermediate to that seen in non-transplanted b1-deficient animals; by day 6 post PHZ, spleen cellularity was 300±24×106 cells/spleen and erythroid precursors expanded by 130 fold in recipients of b1-ablated BM cells compared to 859±159×106 cells/spleen and 900 fold precursor increase in control recipients. These data suggest that both erythroid and their environmental cells were responsible for the reduced survival and poor spleen response in b1-deficient mice. The target environmental cells (fibroblasts, endothelial cells, macrophages) and/or matrix involved will be the focus of future studies. It is of interest that in contrast to splenic response, the increased release of progenitors from BM seen in animals reconstituted with b1D/D cells was as high as that seen in non-transplanted b1- deficient animals and with the same qualitative characteristics, suggesting this alteration in biodistribution of progenitors is cell autonomous. Taken together, our data suggest that a combined expression of b1 integrins in erythroid and cells in their microenvironment is critical for survival and optimal splenic response to a PHZ-induced stress in adult mice; release of progenitors seen at homeostasis in both b1 and a4 models is cell autonomous with a preferential erythroid progenitor release from BM seen only in b1-deficient but not in a4-deficient mice; in contrast to results with fetal liver cells showing a critical role of a4b1 but not a5b1 integrin for proliferative expansion of erythroid cells, in adults a5b1 expression in erythroid and environmental cells in the spleen assumes a more critical role. Our data expand the current knowledge on the distinct dependency of a4b1 vs a5b1 integrins in basal vs stress erythropoiesis and bridge previously divergent information from in vitro and in vivo experiments.


Author(s):  
Nisharani Jadhav ◽  
Ravikumar Baradol ◽  
Manisha Bhosale

Background: The aim of the study was to evaluate the seizure modifying potential of Ondansetron in experimental models of seizures in mice.Methods: Mice were treated with three different doses of ondansetron i.p., at 3mg/kg, 6mg/kg and 8mg/kg and control group received normal saline 0.1 ml i.p. for 3 days. On 3rd day, mice were subjected to MES, of different strength half an hour after ondansetron administration and findings were recorded. The minimum threshold current at which tonic hind limb extension occurred was recorded. Each animal was observed for incidence and duration of tonic hind limb extension and the strength of current was noted. In PTZ model, mice were subjected to subconvulsive dose of PTZ 45mg/kg and convulsive dose of PTZ 60mg/kg. The incidence and onset of convulsion at 45 and 60mg/kg dose of PTZ were recorded.Results: Mice receiving ondansetron 3mg/kg, showed significant decrease in duration of tonic hind limb extension at convulsive current strength of 50mA (p<0.001). While group receiving 6mg/kg, showed decrease in seizure threshold. (40mA current strength) Mice receiving 3mg/kg, showed significant increase in onset of seizures (p<0.001) at convulsive 60mg/kg dose of PTZ. While mice receiving 6mg/kg showed decrease in seizure threshold at sub convulsive 45mg/kg dose of PTZ. Group receiving 8mg/kg ondansetron, showed 100% mortality due to convulsions caused by ondansetron.Conclusions: Ondansetron at low therapeutic dose (3mg/kg) has an anticonvulsant action, while it has a proconvulsant action at a high therapeutic dose (6mg/kg). Ondansetron causes convulsions at toxic dose (8mg/kg). So, care should be taken while giving ondansettron in high doses to prevent chemotherapy induced emesis.


1985 ◽  
Vol 63 (9) ◽  
pp. 1151-1154
Author(s):  
Peter Walker

Neonatal hyperthyroidism (NH) in the rat is associated with permanent reductions in serum thyroxine (T4), triiodothyronine (T3), and thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) concentrations in the adult, changes suggestive of a hypothyroid state. In the adult NH rat, the thyrotroph appears to be more sensitive to the feedback effects of thyroid hormones. To determine whether thyroid hormone sensitive tissues retain their responsiveness to thyroid hormones, the long-term effects of NH on mouse submandibular gland (SMG) epidermal growth factor (EGF) content were examined. NH was induced in female mice by 20 daily subcultaneous injections of 0.4 μg of T4 per gram of body weight. Control female mice received daily injections of vehicle alone. At 21 days of age, NH and control mice were sacrificed and SMG EGF content was measured by specific radioimmunoassay. SMG EGF content and concentration in 21-day-old NH mice exceeded that of control mice by 2400- and 1500-fold, respectively (P < 0.001). SMG EGF content and concentration in adult (90-day-old) NH mice were slightly, but not significantly, lower than those of control mice. Mean SMG weight, however, was significantly decreased in adult NH mice (P < 0.01). Interestingly, SMG content and concentration of EGF in adult NH mice were lower than in 21-day-old NH mice. After 5 days T4 treatment (16 μg/d) of adult mice, SMG weight in NH mice increased significantly (P < 0.01) but was unchanged in control mice. SMG EGF content and concentration increased significantly in both adult NH and control mice (P < 0.01). However, the magnitude of the increase was markedly obtunded in adult NH mice. These observations indicate that thyroid hormones precociously and exponentially increase SMG EGF content and concentration in neonatal mice. The marked increases strongly suggest thyroid hormone mediated synthesis of EGF and acceleration of maturation of gene expression for EGF synthesis. In addition, NH appears to modify thyroid hormone regulation of gene expression for EGF synthesis in adult mice.


1952 ◽  
Vol 96 (6) ◽  
pp. 531-548 ◽  
Author(s):  
William J. Mogabgab ◽  
Frank L. Horsfall

Sodium fluoroacetate, given after virus inoculation in doses of 3 to 4 mg. per kg. in mice or 2 mg. in chick embryos, caused only a slight delay in the multiplication of the PR8 strain of influenza A virus in the mouse lung and of PR8 or the Lee strain of influenza B virus in the allantoic sac. The quantities of the compound used were sufficient to cause approximately 10 to 20 per cent mortality in mice and 100 per cent in chick embryos. The use of small virus inocula did not markedly increase the effect of sodium fluoroacetate on the multiplication of PR8 or Lee in the chick embryo and maximal titers were obtained in all cases. In contrast to the findings in the chick embryo, sodium fluoroacetate caused a definite delay in the multiplication of Lee virus in the mouse lung but did not affect the final virus titer. Sodium fluoroacetate in like amounts caused only a minimal delay in the multiplication of pneumonia virus of mice (PVM) in the mouse lung or of mumps virus in the chick embryo. With both PVM and mumps virus, maximal titers were obtained almost simultaneously in fluoroacetate and control animals. When three daily injections of the compound were given to mice infected previously with PVM, a definite diminution in the virus titer was demonstrable. However, pretreatment with three daily injections of the compound caused no alteration in the capacity of mice to support the multiplication of PVM. From the results of these experiments, it appears that the cellular metabolic processes blocked by sodium fluoroacetate are not essential for the multiplication of influenza viruses, mumps virus, or pneumonia virus of mice (PVM).


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