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1-antitrypsin in coal- and
silica-induced connective tissue breakdown
Department of Pathology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada V6T 2B5
Mineral dusts
produce emphysema, and administration of dust to rats results in the
rapid appearance of desmosine and hydroxyproline in lavage
fluid, confirming that dusts directly induce connective tissue breakdown. To examine the role of neutrophils and
1-antitrypsin (
1-AT) in this process, we
instilled silica or coal into normal rats or rats that had been
pretreated with antiserum against neutrophils. One day after dust
exposure, lavage fluid neutrophils and desmosine and hydroxyproline
levels were all elevated; treatment with antiserum against neutrophils
reduced neutrophils by 75%, desmosine by 40-50%, and
hydroxyproline by 25%. By 7 days, lavage fluid neutrophils and
desmosine level had decreased, whereas macrophages and hydroxyproline level had increased. By ELISA analysis, lavage fluid
1-AT levels were increased
four- to eightfold at both times. On Western blot, some of the
1-AT appeared as degraded
fragments, and by HPLC analysis, 5-10% of the methionine residues
were oxidized. At both times, lavage fluid exhibited considerably
elevated serine elastase inhibitory capacity and also showed elevations
in metalloelastase activity. We conclude that, in this model,
connective tissue breakdown is initially driven largely by
neutrophil-derived proteases and that markedly elevated levels of
functional
1-AT do not prevent breakdown, thus providing in vivo support for the concept of quantum proteolysis proposed by Liou and Campbell (T. G. Liou and E. J. Campbell. Biochemistry 34:
16171-16177, 1995). Macrophage-derived proteases may
be of increasing importance over time, especially in coal-treated animals.
emphysema; metalloproteases; serine proteases
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