Active sodium transport and alveolar epithelial Na-K-ATPase increase during subacute hyperoxia in rats
W. Olivera, K. Ridge, L. D. Wood and J. I. Sznajder Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Michael Reese Hospital, Chicago, Illinois 60616. Active Na+ transport and lung edema clearance were studied in a model of lung injury caused by sublethal oxygen exposure. Rats exposed to 85% O2 for 7 days were...
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Veröffentlicht in: | American journal of physiology. Lung cellular and molecular physiology 1994-05, Vol.266 (5), p.577-L584 |
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Zusammenfassung: | W. Olivera, K. Ridge, L. D. Wood and J. I. Sznajder
Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Michael Reese Hospital, Chicago, Illinois 60616.
Active Na+ transport and lung edema clearance were studied in a model of
lung injury caused by sublethal oxygen exposure. Rats exposed to 85% O2 for
7 days were studied at 0, 7, 14, and 30 days after removal from the
hyperoxic chamber and compared with room air controls. In the
isolated-perfused, fluid-filled rat lung, albumin flux from the perfusate
into the air spaces increased after oxygen exposure and returned to control
values after 7 days of recovery. However, permeability to small solutes
(Na+ and mannitol) normalized only after 30 days of recovery from
hyperoxia. Active Na+ transport increased immediately after oxygen exposure
and returned to control values 7 days after removal from hyperoxic chamber.
Na-K-adenosinetriphosphatase (ATPase) activity, and protein expression in
alveolar epithelial type II cells obtained at the end of the isolated lung
experiments increased significantly after the oxygen exposure compared with
controls in association with the increased active Na+ transport. We
conclude that active Na+ transport and lung liquid clearance are increased
in the subacute hyperoxic phase of lung injury in rats, due in part to the
upregulation of alveolar epithelial Na-K-ATPases. Conceivably, this
behavior protects against the effects of lung injury by allowing the
injured lung to clear edema more effectively. Accordingly, this
upregulation may be targeted as a strategy to diminish edema in patients
with lung injury. |
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ISSN: | 1040-0605 0002-9513 1522-1504 |
DOI: | 10.1152/ajplung.1994.266.5.l577 |