Overexpression of Surfactant Protein–C Mature Peptide Causes Neonatal Lethality in Transgenic Mice

Juliana Johnson Conkright(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Cheng-Lun Na(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Timothy E. Weaver(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center)
American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology
January 1, 2002
Cited by 48

Abstract

Surfactant replacement preparations containing either surfactant protein (SP)-B or SP-C significantly improve lung function in surfactant-deficient infants, suggesting that these peptides may be functionally redundant. SP-B is absent and SP-C is greatly diminished in the airspaces of SP-B (-/-) mice, which die of respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) shortly after birth. The goal of this study was to determine if elevated expression of SP-C mature peptide could reverse the neonatal lethality in SP-B (-/-) mice. SP-C peptide (residues 24-57 of mouse SP-C proprotein) with a hemagglutinin epitope (SP-C(24-57)HA) was expressed in type II cells of transgenic mice, with the goal of crossing these animals into the SP-B (-/-) background. Unexpectedly, expression of the SP-C(24-57)HA transgene resulted in delayed/arrested lung development and lethal, neonatal RDS of all transgenic progeny in two independent transgenic lines. In transgenic mice, SP-C(24-57)HA was localized predominantly to the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi; in contrast, SP-B and SP-C were very difficult to detect in the endoplasmic reticulum of wild-type mice. These results suggest that elevated expression of SP-C(24-57)HA in type II cells resulted in aggregation of SP-C in the early secretory pathway, leading to cytotoxicity and, ultimately, altered lung development.


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