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Role of lung apolipoprotein A-I in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis: antiinflammatory and antifibrotic effect on experimental lung injury and fibrosis

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Abstract
RATIONALE: Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is caused by alterations in expression of proteins involved in multiple pathways, including matrix deposition, inflammation, injury, and repair. OBJECTIVES: To understand the pathogenic changes in lung protein expression in IPF and to evaluate apolipoprotein (Apo) A-I as a candidate therapeutic molecule. METHODS: Two-dimensional electrophoresis was adopted for differential display proteomics. Reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction, Western blotting, immunohistochemical staining, and ELISA were performed for identification and quantitative measurement of Apo A-I in bronchoalveolar lavage fluids from subjects with IPF and experimental bleomycin-induced mice. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Sixteen protein spots showed differences in relative intensity between IPF (n = 14) and healthy control subjects (n = 8). Nano liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) revealed increase of haptoglobulin and decrease of alpha(1)-antitrypsin, alpha(1)-antichymotrypsin, macrophage capping protein, angiotensinogen, hemoglobin chain B, Apo A-I, clusterin, protein disulfide isomerase A3, immunoglobulin, and complement C4A in IPF compared with normal control subjects (P = 0.006-0.044). Apo A-I concentrations were lower in bronchoalveolar lavage fluids from subjects with IPF (n = 28) than in normal control subjects (n = 18; P < 0.01). In bleomycin-treated mice, Apo A-I protein in BALF was lower than that in sham-treated control animals. Immunohistochemical analysis showed positive staining on intraalveolar macrophages and epithelial cells of the lungs. Intranasal treatment with Apo A-I protein reduced the bleomycin-induced increases in number of inflammatory cells and collagen deposition in sham-treated mice in a dose-dependent manner. CONCLUSIONS: Alterations of several inflammatory and antiinflammatory proteins in the lungs may be related to the pathogenesis of IPF, and local treatment with Apo A-I is very effective against the development of experimental lung injury and fibrosis.
All Author(s)
T. H. Kim ; Y. H. Lee ; K. H. Kim ; S. H. Lee ; J. Y. Cha ; E. K. Shin ; S. Jung ; A. S. Jang ; S. W. Park ; S. T. Uh ; Y. H. Kim ; J. S. Park ; H. G. Sin ; W. Youm ; E. S. Koh ; S. Y. Cho ; Y. K. Paik ; T. Y. Rhim ; C. S. Park
Issued Date
2010
Type
Article
Keyword
fibrosis, pulmonaryidiopathic interstitial pneumoniaapolipoprotein A-Ibleomycin A2
Publisher
American Thoracic Society
American Lung Association
ISSN
1073-449x
Citation Title
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine
Citation Volume
182
Citation Number
5
Citation Start Page
633
Citation End Page
642
Language(ISO)
eng
DOI
10.1164/rccm.200905-0659OC
URI
http://schca-ir.schmc.ac.kr/handle/2022.oak/1205
Appears in Collections:
호흡기내과 > 1. Journal Papers
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