4.3 Article

The relative roles of passive surface forces and active ion transport in the modulation of airway surface liquid volume and composition

期刊

JOURNAL OF GENERAL PHYSIOLOGY
卷 118, 期 2, 页码 223-236

出版社

ROCKEFELLER UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1085/jgp.118.2.223

关键词

cystic fibrosis; mucus; ion transport; chloride; epithelia

资金

  1. NHLBI NIH HHS [HL42384, P01 HL034322, HL34322] Funding Source: Medline

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Two hypotheses have been proposed recently that offer different views on the role of airway surface liquid (ASL) in lung defense. The compositional hypothesis predicts that ASL [NaCl] is kept low (< 50 mM) by passive forces to permit antimicrobial factors to act as a chemical defense. The volume hypothesis predicts that ASL volume (height) is regulated isotonically by active ion transport to maintain efficient mechanical mucus clearance as the primary form of lung defense. To compare these hypotheses, we searched for roles for: (1) passive forces (surface tension, ciliary tip capillarity, Donnan, and nonionic osmolytes) in the regulation of ASL composition; and (2) active ion transport in ASL volume regulation. In primary human tracheobronchial cultures, we found no evidence that a low [NaCl] ASL could be produced by passive forces, or that nonionic osmolytes contributed substantially to ASL osmolality. Instead, we found that active ion transport regulated ASL volume (height), and that feedback existed between the ASL and airway epithelia to govern the rate of ion transport and volume absorption. The mucus laver acted as a reservoir to buffer periciliary liquid layer height (7 mum) at a level optimal for mucus transport by donating or accepting liquid to or from the periciliary liquid layer, respectively. These data favor the active ion transport/volume model hypothesis to describe ASL physiology.

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