Mendelson C R, Boggaram V
Department of Biochemistry, Cecil H. and Ida Green Center for Reproductive Biology Sciences, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas 75235.
Annu Rev Physiol. 1991;53:415-40. doi: 10.1146/annurev.ph.53.030191.002215.
The synthesis of surfactant glycerophospholipids and proteins is under multifactorial control and is regulated by a number of hormones and factors, including glucocorticoids, prolactin, insulin, growth factors, estrogens, androgens, thyroid hormones and catecholamines acting through beta-adrenergic receptors, and cAMP. In studies with human fetal lung in organ culture, glucocorticoids, in combination with prolactin and/or insulin, were found to increase the rate of lamellar body PC synthesis and increase the molar ratio of surfactant PG to PI to a value similar to that of surfactant secreted by the human fetal lung at term. Recognition of the potential importance of the surfactant proteins SP-A, SP-B, and SP-C in the reduction of alveolar surface tension and in endocytosis and reutilization of secreted surfactant by type II cells has stimulated rapid advancement of knowledge concerning the structures of these proteins and their genes, as well as their developmental and hormonal regulation in fetal lung tissue. The genes encoding the surfactant proteins are expressed in a lung-specific manner and appear to be regulated independently during fetal development. SP-A gene expression is initiated in fetal lung tissue after 75-85% of gestation is completed in all mammalian species studied to date. In the human fetus, however, expression of the SP-B and SP-C genes is detectable prior to mid-gestation. In situ hybridization studies of human lung tissue indicate that the SP-A gene is expressed only in type II cells, whereas SP-B gene expression is detectable in bronchioalveolar epithelial cells as well. Cyclic AMP and glucocorticoids have pronounced effects on the regulation of SP-A gene expression in human and rabbit fetal lung in culture. In human fetal lung in vitro, the effects of cAMP are primarily at the level of gene transcription. By contrast, glucocorticoids have stimulatory effects on SP-A gene transcription and inhibitory effects on SP-A mRNA stability. Furthermore, the combined effects of cAMP and glucocorticoids on SP-A gene transcription in human fetal lung in vitro are synergistic. Glucocorticoids appear to be of primary importance in the regulation of the genes encoding SP-B and SP-C. Elucidation of the molecular mechanisms involved in the regulation of expression of the surfactant protein genes in developing fetal lung will be of fundamental importance to our understanding of the developmental and tissue-specific regulation of eukaryotic gene expression.
表面活性甘油磷脂和蛋白质的合成受多因素控制,并由多种激素和因子调节,包括糖皮质激素、催乳素、胰岛素、生长因子、雌激素、雄激素、甲状腺激素以及通过β-肾上腺素能受体起作用的儿茶酚胺和环磷酸腺苷(cAMP)。在人体胎儿肺器官培养研究中,发现糖皮质激素与催乳素和/或胰岛素联合使用,可提高板层小体磷脂酰胆碱(PC)的合成速率,并使表面活性磷脂酰甘油(PG)与磷脂酰肌醇(PI)的摩尔比增加至与足月时人体胎儿肺分泌的表面活性物质相似的值。认识到表面活性蛋白A(SP-A)、表面活性蛋白B(SP-B)和表面活性蛋白C(SP-C)在降低肺泡表面张力以及II型细胞对分泌的表面活性物质的内吞作用和再利用中的潜在重要性,促使人们对这些蛋白质及其基因的结构以及它们在胎儿肺组织中的发育和激素调节的认识迅速推进。编码表面活性蛋白的基因以肺特异性方式表达,并且在胎儿发育过程中似乎是独立调节的。在迄今为止研究的所有哺乳动物物种中,在妊娠完成75-85%后,SP-A基因在胎儿肺组织中开始表达。然而,在人类胎儿中,在妊娠中期之前即可检测到SP-B和SP-C基因的表达。对人体肺组织的原位杂交研究表明,SP-A基因仅在II型细胞中表达,而SP-B基因在支气管肺泡上皮细胞中也可检测到表达。环磷酸腺苷(cAMP)和糖皮质激素对培养的人和兔胎儿肺中SP-A基因表达的调节有显著影响。在体外培养的人体胎儿肺中,cAMP的作用主要在基因转录水平。相比之下,糖皮质激素对SP-A基因转录有刺激作用,对SP-A信使核糖核酸(mRNA)稳定性有抑制作用。此外,cAMP和糖皮质激素在体外培养的人体胎儿肺中对SP-A基因转录的联合作用是协同的。糖皮质激素似乎在调节编码SP-B和SP-C的基因中起主要作用。阐明发育中的胎儿肺中表面活性蛋白基因表达调控所涉及的分子机制,对于我们理解真核基因表达的发育和组织特异性调控至关重要。