Background: Acute elevation of left atrial pressure (LAP) increases extravascular water and impairs active Na(+) transport in rat lungs. We have reported that overexpression of Na,K-ATPase subunit genes in the alveolar epithelium increases alveolar fluid clearance (AFC) in normal and injured rat lungs with normal LAP. We reasoned that adenovirus-mediated transfer of an Na,K-ATPase beta-subunit gene to the alveolar epithelium could improve AFC in rat lungs in the presence of acutely elevated LAP.
Methods And Results: Normal rats were infected with 4x10(9) plaque-forming units of E1a(-)/E3(-) recombinant adenoviruses that contained a cytomegalovirus promoter coupled to a rat Na,K-ATPase beta(1)-subunit cDNA (adbeta(1)) or no cDNA (adNull) 7 days before study. Na,K-ATPase alpha(1)- and beta(1)-subunit abundance in basolateral cell membranes isolated from the peripheral lung was significantly increased in adbeta(1)-infected lungs compared with sham and adNull-infected controls. In all groups, elevation of LAP reduced membrane-bound Na,K-ATPase abundance; however, abundance in adbeta(1)-infected lungs remained greater than in controls. AFC, measured with a fluid-filled isolated lung preparation in the presence of elevated LAP (15 cmH(2)O), in Na,K-ATPase beta(1)-subunit-overexpressing lungs was up to 100% greater than in controls and was not different from rats studied at normal LAP (0 cmH(2)O).
Conclusions: These data suggest that alveolar overexpression of an Na,K-ATPase beta(1)-subunit can counteract downregulation of membrane-bound solute transporters owing to elevated pulmonary vascular pressures and can restore active Na(+) transport and AFC in this rat model of acute hydrostatic pulmonary edema.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/hc0402.102848 | DOI Listing |
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