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Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts 02115
Surfactant dysfunction in acute lung injury has
been postulated as a result of free radical damage to lipid and protein
components. This study examines whether transition metals with
different redox potentials and different binding affinities for lipids
and proteins affect interfacial properties differently. Purified whole
calf lung surfactant (CLS) was incubated with 0.125 mM
Fe2+,
Fe3+,
Fe3+-EDTA complex, or
Cu2+ either alone or with 0.25 mM
H2O2
or
H2O2
plus 0.25 mM ascorbate for 4 and 24 h. Lipid peroxidation was assessed
by measurement of thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances (TBARS), and
free radical-mediated alterations in protein structure were assessed by
fluorescamine assay and Western blot analysis. Function was assayed by
pulsating bubble surfactometry. Lipid peroxidation was detected in
samples incubated with Fe2+,
Fe3+, and
Fe3+-EDTA but not with
Cu2+. All transition metal-based
free radical systems affected surfactant protein composition by
fluorescamine assay, indicating free radical-mediated modification of
protein side chains. Western blot analysis demonstrated surfactant
protein A modification, with the generation of higher- and
lower-molecular-mass immunoreactive products. Despite
biochemical evidence of lipid and protein modification, surfactant
dysfunction was minimal and was manifest as an increase in the
compression ratio required to achieve surface tension < 1 dyn/cm.
This dysfunction was readily reversed by the addition of 5 mM
Ca2+ either before or after
oxidation. These data indicate that copper- and iron-based free
radical-generating systems modify the lipid and protein components of
surfactant differently but suggest that these changes have little
effect on surfactant function.
acute lung injury; lipid oxidation; protein oxidation
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