Brown C F, Pratt P C, Lynn W S
Inflammation. 1982 Dec;6(4):327-41. doi: 10.1007/BF00917305.
In this study, we have shown that chickens, frogs, and toads are resistant to acute pulmonary injury by a variety of toxic agents, (O2, hyperbaric O2, paraquat, and silica), that cause extensive acute injury in mammals. Acute pulmonary injury is defined as a massive influx of inflammatory cells, both interstitially and into the alveolar spaces, pulmonary edema, hemorrhage, and the presence of H2O2 and O-2 in the lavaged supernatant, occurring within 48 h. In some cases, chronic effects of the toxins were observed after 90 h., i.e., hemorrhage, fibrosis, and an accumulation of interstitial inflammatory cells. In all three nonmammal systems, isolated inflammatory cells failed to respond chemotactically in vitro to known mammalian chemotaxins. Pulmonary lavage of the exposed chickens, frogs, and toads also failed to produce inflammatory cells. Pulmonary edema was not detected in any of the animals by comparison of lung weight to total body weight. Intratracheal injections of silica for 2 weeks did produce chronic effects in chickens and frogs. Morphologically, the lungs showed signs of fibrosis and accumulation of interstitial inflammatory cells, but no intraalveolar cells. After 90 h of hyperbaric O2, frogs exhibited a massive infiltration of interstitial inflammatory cells and hemorrhage. Elevated O2 levels (100%) for 2 weeks under normal atmospheric conditions produced no changes in frog lungs or in the amount of inflammatory cells in the lungs. Intravenous injections of paraquat for up to 208 h failed to initiate an accumulation of pulmonary inflammatory cells or the development of pulmonary edema in chickens. There was also no detectable H2O2 or O-2 in the lavaged supernatant. It was not determined whether paraquat had a longer or more chronic effect on chickens. We suggest that the lack of an acute pulmonary inflammatory mechanism in chickens, frogs, and toads is in part responsible for the resistance of these animals to acute pulmonary injury by oxidizing mammalian toxins.
在本研究中,我们已表明鸡、青蛙和蟾蜍对多种有毒物质(氧气、高压氧、百草枯和二氧化硅)所致的急性肺损伤具有抗性,而这些有毒物质会在哺乳动物中引起广泛的急性损伤。急性肺损伤定义为在48小时内出现大量炎性细胞间质内及肺泡腔内大量涌入、肺水肿、出血以及灌洗上清液中存在过氧化氢和超氧阴离子。在某些情况下,90小时后观察到毒素的慢性影响,即出血、纤维化和间质炎性细胞积聚。在所有这三种非哺乳动物系统中,分离出的炎性细胞在体外对已知的哺乳动物趋化因子无趋化反应。对暴露的鸡、青蛙和蟾蜍进行肺灌洗也未产生炎性细胞。通过比较肺重量与总体重,在任何动物中均未检测到肺水肿。对鸡和青蛙气管内注射二氧化硅2周确实产生了慢性影响。从形态学上看,肺显示出纤维化迹象和间质炎性细胞积聚,但无肺泡内细胞。高压氧暴露90小时后,青蛙出现间质炎性细胞大量浸润和出血。在正常大气条件下,2周内氧气水平升高至100%未使青蛙肺或肺内炎性细胞数量发生变化。对鸡静脉注射百草枯长达208小时未能引发肺炎性细胞积聚或肺水肿形成。灌洗上清液中也未检测到过氧化氢或超氧阴离子。未确定百草枯对鸡是否具有更长时间或更慢性的影响。我们认为,鸡、青蛙和蟾蜍缺乏急性肺炎症机制部分解释了这些动物对氧化性哺乳动物毒素所致急性肺损伤具有抗性的原因。