4.4 Article

Biomarkers of lung alveolarization and microvascular maturation in response to intermittent hypoxia and/or early antioxidant/fish oil supplementation in neonatal rats

Journal

PEDIATRIC PULMONOLOGY
Volume 58, Issue 8, Pages 2352-2363

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ppul.26495

Keywords

alveolarization; glutathione nanoparticles; neonatal intermittent hypoxia; tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases; vascular endothelial growth factor

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Early supplementation with fish oil and/or antioxidants in rats exposed to neonatal intermittent hypoxia (IH) improves biomarkers of lung alveolarization and microvascular maturation, and reduces IH-induced lung injury.
ObjectiveExtremely preterm infants experience frequent intermittent hypoxia (IH) episodes during oxygen therapy which causes significant damage to the lungs and curtails important signaling pathways that regulate normal lung alveolarization and microvascular maturation. We tested the hypothesis that early supplementation with fish oil and/or antioxidants in rats exposed to neonatal IH improves expression of lung biomarkers of alveolarization and microvascular maturation, and reduces IH-induced lung injury. Study Design/MethodsFrom birth (P0) to P14, rat pups were exposed to room air (RA) or neonatal IH during which they received daily oral supplementation with either: (1) olive oil (OO) (control); (2) Coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10) in OO; (3) fish oil; (4) glutathione nanoparticles (nGSH); or (5) fish oil +CoQ10. At P14 pups were placed in RA until P21 with no further treatment. RA controls were similarly treated. Lung growth and alveolarization, histopathology, apoptosis, oxidative stress and biomarkers of alveolarization and microvascular maturation were determined. ResultsNeonatal IH was associated with reduced lung weights and severe histopathological outcomes. These effects were curtailed with fish oil and nGSH. nGSH was also protective against apoptosis, while CoQ10 prevented IH-induced ROS production. Of all treatments, nGSH and CoQ10 + fish oil-induced vascular endothelial growth factor(165) and CD31 (Platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule-1), which are associated with angiogenesis. CoQ10 + fish oil improved alveolarization in RA and IH despite evidence of hemorrhage. ConclusionsThe benefits of nGSH and CoQ10 + fish oil suggest an antioxidant effect which may be required to curtail IH-induced lung injury. Further clinical assessment of the effectiveness of nGSH is warranted.

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