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1 Department of Respiratory
Medicine,
Annexin I (lipocortin 1) is
abundant in lung secretions. Concentrations rise after oral
glucocorticoid, but the effect of inhaled budesonide on annexin I
release is unknown. Extracellular annexin I in bronchoalveolar lavage
fluid (BALF) from 11 asthmatic patients was unaffected by inhaled
budesonide (800 µg twice daily for 4 wk; mean after budesonide, 110 ng/mg albumin; after placebo, 107 ng/mg albumin). Rat alveolar
macrophages (AMs) and alveolar epithelial type II (ATII)
cells were cultured alone and with budesonide or dexamethasone. Mean
basal concentrations of cellular (3.5 ng/106 AMs; 4.4 ng/106 ATII cells) and secreted
(1.4 ng/106 AMs; 1.8 ng/106 ATII cells) annexin I were
similar in AMs and ATII cells. Although budesonide subdued annexin I
secretion from both cell types, dexamethasone stimulated annexin I
release. Annexin I release from ATII cells peaked at
10
7 M dexamethasone but at
10
3 M dexamethasone from
AMs. Thus, at low concentrations of dexamethasone, ATII cells probably
contribute more annexin I to respiratory tract secretions than AMs,
although at high concentrations, both cells probably contribute. The
study demonstrates previously undescribed differences between
glucocorticoids and between AMs and ATII cells with respect to annexin
I regulation.
bronchoalveolar lavage fluid; budesonide; dexamethasone; lipocortin 1; respiratory tract
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