Exaggerated airway narrowing in mice treated with intratracheal cationic protein
Author(s) -
Jason H. T. Bates,
Scott Wagers,
Ryan J. Norton,
Lisa Rinaldi,
Charles G. Irvin
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
journal of applied physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.253
H-Index - 229
eISSN - 8750-7587
pISSN - 1522-1601
DOI - 10.1152/japplphysiol.01013.2005
Subject(s) - methacholine , medicine , airway , immunology , bronchial hyperresponsiveness , lung , asthma , airway hyperresponsiveness , bronchus , respiratory system , respiratory disease , anesthesia
Airway hyperresponsiveness in mice with allergic airway inflammation can be attributed entirely to exaggerated closure of peripheral airways (Wagers S, Lundblad LK, Ekman M, Irvin CG, and Bates JHT. J Appl Physiol 96: 2019-2027, 2004). However, clinical asthma can be characterized by hyperresponsiveness of the central airways as well as the lung periphery. We, therefore, sought to establish a complementary model of hyperresponsiveness in the mouse due to excessive narrowing of the airways. We treated mice with a tracheal instillation of the cationic protein poly-l-lysine (PLL), hypothesizing that this would reduce the barrier function of the epithelium and thereby render the underlying airway smooth muscle more accessible to aerosolized methacholine. The PLL-treated animals were hypersensitive to methacholine: they exhibited an exaggerated response to submaximal doses but had a maximal response that was similar to controls. With the aid of a computational model of the mouse lung, we conclude that the methacholine responsiveness of PLL-treated mice is fundamentally different in nature to the hyperresponsiveness that we found previously in mice with allergically inflamed lungs.
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