Warheit D B, Hartsky M A
Du Pont Haskell Laboratory, Newark, Delaware 19714.
Microsc Res Tech. 1993 Dec 1;26(5):412-22. doi: 10.1002/jemt.1070260509.
Alveolar macrophages (AM) play an important role in clearing inhaled particles from the lung. The mechanisms through which macrophages identify particles that have been deposited in the alveolar regions is not well understood, although macrophage motility and phagocytic functions appear to be prerequisites for efficient clearance of inhaled materials. In previous studies, we assessed the mechanisms of macrophage-mediated clearance of inhaled particles using a rat model. In this regard, it appears that one mechanism by which rat alveolar macrophages are recruited to sites of particle or fiber deposition is through complement activation and consequent generation of chemotactic factors by the inhaled particulates. Whether this mechanism is operative in other rodent species remains an unanswered question. The current studies were undertaken to compare pulmonary clearance responses in several rodent species exposed to carbonyl iron (CI) particles. In vitro and in vivo pulmonary clearance responses were evaluated using one strain each of mouse, hamster, rat, and guinea pig. In vitro studies showed that hamster AM had the greatest phagocytic activity and that rat AM migrated best to complement-dependent chemotactic factors. Subsequently, groups of animals from each species were exposed to CI particles for 1 or 6 hr at aerosol concentrations of 100 mg/m3. Particle depositions patterns in the distal lung were nearly identical for all species, although enhanced numbers of CI particles were deposited on alveolar duct bifurcations of either rats or mice compared to hamsters, and particle deposition in guinea pigs was substantially lower. Time course studies showed that enhanced numbers of rat AM migrated to deposition sites and phagocytized particles, and this correlated with increased numbers and percentages of phagocytic macrophages recovered by lavage (P < 0.01). In vivo phagocytic rates were the lowest in the mouse, and this correlated with reduced phagocytic rates in vitro. It is concluded from these studies that the rat may be the most efficient rodent species in clearing inhaled iron particles. In addition, it is conceivable that hamster AM are recruited to sites of particle deposition by a noncomplement-mediated mechanism.
肺泡巨噬细胞(AM)在清除肺内吸入颗粒方面发挥着重要作用。尽管巨噬细胞的运动性和吞噬功能似乎是有效清除吸入物质的先决条件,但巨噬细胞识别沉积在肺泡区域颗粒的机制尚未完全明确。在先前的研究中,我们使用大鼠模型评估了巨噬细胞介导的吸入颗粒清除机制。在这方面,大鼠肺泡巨噬细胞被招募到颗粒或纤维沉积部位的一种机制似乎是通过补体激活以及吸入颗粒随后产生趋化因子。这种机制在其他啮齿动物物种中是否起作用仍是一个未解决的问题。当前的研究旨在比较几种暴露于羰基铁(CI)颗粒的啮齿动物物种的肺部清除反应。使用小鼠、仓鼠、大鼠和豚鼠的各一个品系评估体外和体内肺部清除反应。体外研究表明,仓鼠的肺泡巨噬细胞具有最强的吞噬活性,而大鼠的肺泡巨噬细胞对补体依赖性趋化因子的迁移能力最佳。随后,将每个物种的动物组暴露于浓度为100 mg/m³的CI颗粒气溶胶中1或6小时。所有物种在肺远端的颗粒沉积模式几乎相同,尽管与仓鼠相比,大鼠或小鼠肺泡导管分叉处沉积的CI颗粒数量有所增加,而豚鼠的颗粒沉积量明显较低。时间进程研究表明,大鼠肺泡巨噬细胞迁移到沉积部位并吞噬颗粒的数量增加,这与灌洗回收的吞噬性巨噬细胞数量和百分比增加相关(P < 0.01)。小鼠的体内吞噬率最低,这与体外吞噬率降低相关。从这些研究得出的结论是,大鼠可能是清除吸入铁颗粒最有效的啮齿动物物种。此外,可以想象仓鼠的肺泡巨噬细胞是通过非补体介导的机制被招募到颗粒沉积部位的。