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Metachrony drives effective mucociliary transport via a calcium-dependent mechanism. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The mucociliary transport apparatus plays a crucial role in lung health by using coordinated cilia movement to clear mucus and particles through a process called metachrony.
  • Researchers hypothesized that disruptions in calcium signaling would hinder metachrony and reduce mucociliary transport (MCT), and they tested this using imaging techniques on human and ferret tracheae.
  • Results showed that metachrony significantly enhances MCT by 48% in both species and that calcium signaling is essential for maintaining this coordinated movement.

Article Abstract

The mucociliary transport apparatus is critical for maintaining lung health via the coordinated movement of cilia to clear mucus and particulates. A metachronal wave propagates across the epithelium when cilia on adjacent multiciliated cells beat slightly out of phase along the proximal-distal axis of the airways in alignment with anatomically directed mucociliary clearance. We hypothesized that metachrony optimizes mucociliary transport (MCT) and that disruptions of calcium signaling would abolish metachrony and decrease MCT. We imaged bronchi from human explants and ferret tracheae using micro-optical coherence tomography (µOCT) to evaluate airway surface liquid depth (ASL), periciliary liquid depth (PCL), cilia beat frequency (CBF), MCT, and metachrony in situ. We developed statistical models that included covariates of MCT. Ferret tracheae were treated with BAPTA-AM (chelator of intracellular Ca), lanthanum chloride (nonpermeable Cachannel competitive antagonist), and repaglinide (inhibitor of calaxin) to test calcium dependence of metachrony. We demonstrated that metachrony contributes to mucociliary transport of human and ferret airways. MCT was augmented in regions of metachrony compared with nonmetachronous regions by 48.1%, = 0.0009 or 47.5%, < 0.0020 in humans and ferrets, respectively. PCL and metachrony were independent contributors to MCT rate in humans; ASL, CBF, and metachrony contribute to ferret MCT rates. Metachrony can be disrupted by interference with calcium signaling including intracellular, mechanosensitive channels, and calaxin. Our results support that the presence of metachrony augments MCT in a calcium-dependent mechanism. We developed a novel imaging-based analysis to detect coordination of ciliary motion and optimal coordination, a process called metachrony. We found that metachrony is key to the optimization of ciliary-mediated mucus transport in both ferret and human tracheal tissue. This process appears to be regulated through calcium-dependent mechanisms. This study demonstrates the capacity to measure a key feature of ciliary coordination that may be important in genetic and acquired disorders of ciliary function.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11444503PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajplung.00392.2023DOI Listing

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