4.6 Article

Developmental Stage Is a Major Determinant of Lung Injury in a Murine Model of Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia

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PEDIATRIC RESEARCH
卷 69, 期 4, 页码 312-318

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NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1203/PDR.0b013e31820bcb2a

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  1. Swedish Medical Research Council
  2. Swedish Heart and Lung Foundation
  3. Frimurare Bamhus Foundation
  4. Swedish Government Grants for Medical Research
  5. Queen Silvia Children's Hospital Research Foundation

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Bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) is a common inflammatory lung disease in premature infants. To study the hypothesis that the sensitivity of the lung to inflammatory injury depends on the developmental stage, we studied postnatal lung development in transgenic mice expressing human IL-1 beta (hIL-1 beta) in the lungs during the late canalicular-early saccular, saccular, or late saccular-alveolar stage. Overexpression of hIL-1 beta in the saccular stage caused arrest in alveolar development, airway remodeling, and goblet cell hyperplasia in the lungs as well as poor growth and survival of infant mice. Overexpression of hIL-1 beta during the late canalicular-early saccular stage did not adversely affect lung development, growth, or survival of the pups. Mice expressing hIL-1 beta from the late saccular to alveolar stage had smaller alveolar chord length, thinner septal walls, less airway remodeling and mucus metaplasia, and better survival than mice expressing hIL-1 beta during the saccular stage. Human IL-1 beta overexpression in the saccular stage was sufficient to cause a BPD-like illness in infant mice, whereas the lung was more resistant to hIL-1 beta-induced injury at earlier and later developmental stages. (Pediatr Res 69: 312-318, 2011)

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