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From the Departments of Medicine,* Oncology,
and Immunology and Molecular Pathology,
Royal Free and University College Medical School, London, United Kingdom; and the Department of Medicine (Pulmonary),
Brigham and Womens Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts
| Abstract |
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Traditionally, much of the increase in lung extracellular matrix in the bleomycin model8 and in human pulmonary fibrosis9 has been attributed to the overproduction of interstitial collagens by cytokine-activated fibroblasts. Although several cytokines have been implicated in fibroblast activation, evidence for eminence of transforming growth factor (TGF)-ß1 in fibrotic disorders is substantial.9-14 TGF-ß is most efficiently secreted as a large latent complex15 in which a latent TGF-ß binding protein (LTBP)16 is disulfide bonded to the latent portion of the TGF-ß dimer. LTBP is incorporated into the extracellular matrix by transglutamination,17 and most TGF-ß is stored in the extracellular matrix before activation.18
In our experiments, we evaluated indices of fibrosis, bleomycin damage, and inflammation. We also assessed active and latent TGF-ß levels in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid and lung tissue. Our results indicate that the development of fibrosis and activation of TGF-ß activation are impaired in bleomycin-treated neutrophil elastase-null mice. These data support the concept that neutrophil elastase activity in the lung may have fibrotic as well as matrix-destructive consequences.
| Materials and Methods |
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All animal procedures were approved by the appropriate regulatory body and performed in accordance with Home Office (UK) guidelines.
Generation of Neutrophil Elastase-Null Mice
Neutrophil elastase-null (NE/) mice were established on the 129Sv background as previously described.19 Gene inactivation was achieved by deletion of restriction enzyme sites in exon one (ATG start codon disruption) and exon two (frameshift mutation upstream of catalytic active site). Correctly targeted loci were identified by Southern blot analysis.19
Breeding, Housing, and Genotyping
Chimeric mice were mated to obtain NE+/+ and NE/ breeding colonies. Mouse colonies were housed under conventional conditions in a nonbarrier facility. Signs of opportunistic infection were not manifest. Male and female mice between 12 and 16 weeks of age (20 to 30 g body weight) were used in experimental procedures.
To genotype mice, genomic DNA was amplified by polymerase chain reaction with the following primers: common forward, 5'-CATGACACCCCCACTGTCGTGTCC-3'; wild-type reverse, 5'-CAATGCCAGTAGCATGGCAGCCAG-3'; and null reverse, 5'-GGACTCCTACACTCTCTAATGGAC-3'.
Bleomycin Instillation
Mice were intratracheally injected with 50 µl sterile isotonic saline or with bleomycin sulfate (Kyowa Hakko UK Ltd., Berks, UK) in 50 µl of saline. Unless otherwise indicated, bleomycin was instilled at a concentration of 0.05 U (1 U = 1000 IU = 1 mg).
Fibrosis
Collagen Quantitation
Lung collagen was assessed in acid-hydrolyzed lung tissue by measuring hydroxyproline with a high-pressure liquid chromatography method.20
Histology
Extracellular matrix deposition was visualized by Massons trichrome staining of formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded lung tissue. Histology procedures (tissue processing, sectioning, and Massons trichrome staining) for samples used in Figure 2
were performed in the Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine Morphology Core at Washington University in St. Louis, MO.
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Comet Assay
Saline-perfused lung tissue from untreated and bleomycin-instilled animals was digested with dispase (Calbiochem, Nottingham, UK) and minced into small pieces. DNA strand breaks were detected by the standard alkaline comet assay.21
Cytotoxicity
Release of lactate dehydrogenase into bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) was measured as an index of bleomycin cytotoxicity using a CytoTox 96 nonradioactive cytotoxicity assay (Promega, Southampton, UK). Absorbance at 490 nm of formazan products resulting from tetrazolium salt conversion22 was quantified.
Alveolar Leak
Alveolar leak was evaluated by measuring the amount of Evans blue dye23 in BALF or lung tissue. Evans blue dye (Sigma-Aldrich Co. Ltd., Poole, UK) was injected into the tail vein and allowed to circulate for 1 hour before procurement of blood, BALF, and saline-perfused lung tissue. Dye was eluted from powdered lung tissue by overnight incubation in formamide. Absorbances at 620 nm of plasma (diluted 1:30 with saline), BALF (undiluted), and lung tissue (20 mg) were determined.
Inflammation
Bronchoalveolar Lavage
Eight 300-µl lavages of sterile saline were performed. The amount of BALF recovered from each mouse averaged 2 ml.
Flow Cytometry
Approximately 1 x 106 cells from the BALF of each animal were incubated with a phycoerythrin-conjugated antibody to Ly-6G and Ly-6C (Gr-1) (BD Pharmingen, San Diego, CA). Stained cell populations were analyzed with a BD FACScan flow cytometer (BD Biosciences, San Jose, CA).
BALF Cell Enumeration
Total leukocyte counts were attained from unstained cell preparations after red blood cell lysis. Differential leukocyte counts were acquired from cytospin preparations. Approximately 1 x 105 cells were cytocentrifuged onto coated glass slides using a Shandon Cytospin 3 cytocentrifuge (Thermo Electron Corp., Pittsburgh, PA). Cytocentrifugation was for 3 minutes at 1000 rpm. Slides were stained with Dif-Quik (Baxter Dade AG, Dudingen, Switzerland), and at least 500 cells per slide were counted. Leukocytes were classified based on morphological characteristics.
TGF-ß
Active TGF-ß Immunohistochemistry
LC (1-30) an antibody that recognizes active TGF-ß24 was acquired from Kathleen C. Flanders, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD. This antibody was applied to formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded lung tissue. Secondary antibodies were horseradish peroxidase conjugated.
Active TGF-ß Quantitation
Active TGF-ß was quantified with a highly sensitive and specific bioassay based on the ability of TGF-ß to stimulate transcription of plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1). Mink lung epithelial cells (MLECs) stably transfected with an 800-bp fragment of the 5' end of the human PAI-1 gene fused with the firefly luciferase reporter gene,25 were obtained from Daniel B. Rifkin, New York University Medical Center, New York, NY. The addition of active TGF-ß1, -ß2, or -ß3 at concentrations ranging from 1 to 10 pmol/L to these cells produces a linear increase in luciferase activity that can be blocked with isoform-specific antibodies.25 Luciferase activity is minimally increased when other inducers of PAI-1 expression are added to MLECs.25 Treatment of BALF from bleomycin-treated wild-type and NE/ mice with a pan-specific TGF-ß-blocking antibody (R&D Systems, Abingdon, UK) reduced luciferase activity to background levels (Supplemental Figure 1B at http://ajp.amjpathol.org) indicating that stimulation of the PAI-1 promoter by other substances present in BALF was minimal.
MLECs were cultured in Dulbeccos modified Eagles medium containing 10% fetal calf serum and antibiotics (penicillin, streptomycin, amphotericin B, and geneticin) and used between passage 30 and passage 36. MLECs were plated at a concentration of 1.6 x 104 cells/well and allowed to adhere for 3 hours before the addition of samples and standards. After overnight incubation in the presence of samples and standards, MLECs were treated with luciferase lysis reagent (Promega), and relative light units were read using a microplate luminometer (Applied Biosystems, Sunnyhill, CA). Concentrations of active TGF-ß were determined from the linear portion of the standard curve (Supplemental Figure 1A at http://ajp.amjpathol.org).
Collection and Activation of BALF
Eight 300-µl lavages of sterile saline were performed. Immediately after acquisition, lavage samples were centrifuged at 2000 rpm for 10 minutes. The BALF supernatant was removed and aliquoted for storage at 80°C. The amount of BALF recovered from each mouse averaged 2 ml.
Aliquots of cell-free BALF were thawed once immediately before assay of active TGF-ß. Latent TGF-ß in cell-free BALF was activated by heating at 80°C in the presence of 0.5 mmol/L phenylmethyl sulfonyl fluoride and 5 µmol/L ilomastat. Exogenously added active TGF-ß (0.6 ng/ml) was stable under these conditions (data not shown). In quantitative analyses (see Figure 6A
), cell-free BALF from individual animals was used. BALF from several animals was combined for control experiments (Supplemental Figure 1, B and C
, at http://ajp.amjpathol.org).
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Lung tissue (50 mg) was homogenized in Dulbeccos modified Eagles medium containing 0.5 mmol/L phenylmethyl sulfonyl fluoride and 5 µmol/L ilomastat (Chemicon, Harrow, UK), heated at 80°C for 5 minutes and centrifuged for 15 minutes at 1800 rpm. Supernatants were assayed for active TGF-ß, and residual material was washed in Dulbeccos modified Eagles medium, homogenized, heated, and centrifuged. Supernatants obtained from the residual material were assayed for active TGF-ß. This process was repeated three times for a total of five separate TGF-ß extractions from a single lung tissue aliquot (Supplemental Table 1 at http://ajp.amjpathol.org). The amount of active TGF-ß in lung tissue after the fifth extraction was <2 ng.
RNase Protection
RNase protection assays were performed with multiprobe templates (Pharmingen, Cowley, UK) on total lung RNA (3 µg). Trizol reagent (Life Technologies, Paisley, UK) was used to isolate RNA from unperfused lung tissue. Protected fragments were visualized on a FLA-3000 image analyzer (Fujifilm Medical Systems, Stamford, CT). Band intensities were quantitated with Advanced Image Data Analysis (AIDA Version 2.0) software (Raytest Italia S.R.L., Cinisello Balsamo, Italy).
Proteolytic Treatment of Lung Tissue
Lungs from bleomycin-treated animals were inflated with
150 µl of a 1:1 mixture of Tissue-Tek O.C.T. compound (Sakura Finetek U.S.A., Inc., Torrance, CA) and 0.9% saline and frozen in a cryomold surrounded by O.C.T. compound. Serial 10-µm sections were cut in a cryostat maintained at 22°C. Lung sections (200 sections/well) were placed into 12-well plates and kept at 22°C until commencement of protease treatment. Every 10th serial section was stained with hematoxylin and eosin for morphometric analysis of the total lung area subjected to protease treatment.
Dulbeccos modified Eagles medium containing 0.25% bovine serum albumin (1.5 ml) was added to each well of lung tissue. Protease (neutrophil elastase or plasmin) was added to some wells at a concentration of 30 nmol/L. Plates were incubated for 2 hours at 37°C. Enzymatic reactions were stopped by the addition of 0.5 mmol/L phenylmethyl sulfonyl fluoride and 5 µmol/L ilomastat. Samples were concentrated to 800 µl by centrifugal filtration. Half of each sample (400 µl) was assayed for active TGF-ß. The residual 400 µl was heated at 80°C for 10 minutes before measurement of active TGF-ß.
Statistical Analysis
On graphs, data shown are the mean, and error bars depict SEM. In some instances, error bars do not extend beyond the symbols on the graph. Statistical comparison was performed using the appropriate two-tailed Students t-test with n representing the number of mice. Values were considered to be statistically different at P < 0.05.
| Results |
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In bleomycin-treated wild-type (WT) mice, the maximal increase in lung collagen deposition occurred at a dose of 0.05 U (Figure 1A)
30 days after instillation (Figure 1B)
. Similar results were previously obtained with 129Sv mice.26
Based on these data, fibrosis in NE/ mice was evaluated at doses of 0.05 and 0.10 U 30 and 60 days after bleomycin instillation. No significant increase in collagen deposition was observed in bleomycin-treated NE/ mice at either time point (Figure 1C)
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Fibrous interstitial matrix deposition (Figure 2A)
was prominent in WT mice 30 (Figure 2C)
and 60 (Figure 2E)
days after bleomycin instillation. In bleomycin-treated NE/ mice, alveoli were more likely to be occluded by cells than by matrix (Figure 2B)
, and signs of acute lung injury such as alveolar collapse and inflammation were prevalent (Figure 2, B, D, and F)
. Histological evidence of pulmonary fibrosis in bleomycin-treated NE/ mice was minimal (Figure 2, B, D, and F)
. Inflammation seemed to persist in the lungs of bleomycin-treated NE/ mice, and even though alveolar collapse (Figure 2B)
was evident in NE/ lungs 60 days after bleomycin instillation, areas of intra-alveolar fibrosis were nominal (Figure 2F)
. The histological appearance of saline-treated controls was similar (Figure 2, G and H)
.
Alveolar Destruction Is Manifest in Neutrophil Elastase-Null Mice
Bleomycin-induced lung injury is initiated by DNA scission. In bleomycin-treated WT and NE/ mice, DNA damage in the form of strand breaks was evident 4 hours after bleomycin instillation (Figure 3A)
. Differential repair of strand breaks in WT and NE/ mice was not apparent, and the majority of single-strand DNA damage was repaired by 1 day after bleomycin instillation (Figure 3A)
. Cells in which DNA damage cannot be repaired may undergo necrosis and release intracellular contents into the extracellular space. The amount of lactate dehydrogenase in BALF was assessed as an index of bleomycin cytotoxicity. Bleomycin/saline ratios of lactate dehydrogenase measurements were slightly less in BALF obtained from NE/ mice (day 3: WT, 3.6 ± 0.48, and NE/, 2.5 ± 0.45; day 7: WT, 5.2 ± 0.92, and NE/, 4.7 ± 1.1). Statistically, however, the amount of lactate dehydrogenase released into BALF did not differ between WT and NE/ mice at the 7-day time point.
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Neutrophil Burden Is Comparable in Bleomycin-Treated Wild-Type and Neutrophil Elastase-Null Mice
Equivalent numbers of neutrophils were recovered in BALF obtained from WT and NE/ mice 1 day after bleomycin instillation (Figure 4A)
. Neutrophils were also present in histological sections of the alveoli of bleomycin-treated NE/ mice (data not shown), and myeloperoxidase activity in NE/ lung tissue was increased after bleomycin instillation (Supplemental Table 2 at http://ajp.amjpathol.org). In cytospin preparations, the typical morphology of macrophages and neutrophils was obvious (Figure 4, CF)
. No statistically significant differences in the total number of leukocytes recovered in BALF (Figure 4B)
or in the percentages of macrophages, neutrophils, and lymphocytes in BALF (Table 1)
were observed at the 7-day time point.
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Staining for active TGF-ß in the lungs of bleomycin-treated NE/ mice was minimal 7 days after bleomycin instillation (Figure 5A)
. In contrast, staining for active TGF-ß in the lungs of bleomycin-treated WT mice was widespread at this time point (Figure 5B)
and particularly evident in damaged alveoli (Figure 5B
, inset). In many areas active TGF-ß appeared to be associated with the extracellular matrix (Figure 5B
, inset). Macrophages and epithelial cells also stained positively for active TGF-ß in the lungs of bleomycin-treated WT mice (Figure 5, B
and inset).
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TGF-ß was released from lung tissue by neutrophil elastase and by plasmin (Figure 6C)
. The relative proportions of active (46%) and latent (54%) TGF-ß released by plasmin were identical to that detected in control (no protease) samples. The proportion of latent TGF-ß released by neutrophil elastase (58%) was slightly greater. Activation of recombinant small latent TGF-ß (299-LT-005; R&D Systems) by neutrophil elastase was similar to that of heat treatment and of plasmin (Supplemental Figure 2A
at http://ajp.amjpathol.org), but neutrophil elastase had negligible effects on activation of latent TGF-ß complexes recovered in BALF (Supplemental Figure 2B
at http://ajp.amjpathol.org). BALF complexes were readily activated by heat treatment (Figure 6A)
and by plasmin (Supplemental Figure 2B
at http://ajp.amjpathol.org). Because neutrophil elastase activity was demonstrable in BALF from bleomycin-treated animals (Supplemental Figure 2C
at http://ajp.amjpathol.org), these results may indicate that proteolysis of small latent TGF-ß complexes by neutrophil elastase is not favored in vivo.
| Discussion |
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Historically, pulmonary fibrosis was supposed to emanate from neutrophilic or lymphocytic alveolitis,27-32 and neutrophilic alveolitis is most often detected in patients diagnosed with fibrosis of unknown cause or idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis.27-34 Neutrophilic alveolitis was identified in bleomycin-treated neutrophil elastase-null mice. Thus, it is likely that neutrophils are in the appropriate pathophysiological location in the lungs of bleomycin-treated neutrophil elastase-null mice and that the phenotype we describe in this article reflects the specific lack of cleavage of a fibrogenic neutrophil elastase substrate rather than nonspecific absence of oxidative and/or proteolytic activity of other neutrophil enzymes in areas of bleomycin-induced inflammation.
Although the possibility that attenuated lung injury contributes to the diminished fibrosis in neutrophil elastase-null mice cannot be discounted, another explanation for the inability of neutrophil elastase-null mice to increase collagen deposition after bleomycin instillation is impaired TGF-ß activation. TGF-ß is a potent stimulator of collagen production35-37 that has distinct and cell-type-specific functions in each phase of acute wound healing.38,39 Tissue fibrosis may result from excessive or prolonged TGF-ß activity during wound remodeling.40 Although reagents that block TGF-ß activity or signaling have been shown to limit fibrosis in animal models,41-44 application of TGF-ß antagonists to human fibrotic diseases continues to be a challenge.
Impaired TGF-ß activation has been observed in other mouse models. Significant pathological abnormalities attributed to a lack of TGF-ß activation are apparent in unchallenged thrombospondin-1-null mice.45 In ß6 integrin-null,26 CD44 antigen-deficient,46 and interleukin-13-null47 mice, levels of active TGF-ß in bleomycin-treated animals are decreased compared to the appropriate wild-type controls. Thrombospondin-1 and the ß6 integrin subunit participate in nonproteolytic mechanisms of TGF-ß activation. Proteolysis does appear to be involved in the TGF-ß activation pathways mediated by CD44 and interleukin-13. The advantage of multiple and redundant TGF-ß activation mechanisms is underscored by the lethal phenotype of TGF-ß1-null mice.48
We have explored in vivo rescue and reconstitution strategies that would experimentally link the lack of active TGF-ß in bleomycin-treated neutrophil elastase-null mice to the diminished fibrosis in these animals. Because technical limitations obviated direct intratracheal instillation of TGF-ß or neutrophil elastase, a bone marrow transplant protocol was established so that a TGF-ß soluble receptor could be dispensed 1 week after bleomycin instillation to neutrophil elastase-null mice reconstituted with wild-type bone marrow. Neutrophil elastase-null mice transplanted with wild-type bone marrow did develop fibrosis when instilled with bleomycin. In pilot experiments, however, excessive mortality resulted from the administration of a TGF-ß soluble receptor to bleomycin-treated reconstituted animals, and the extent of lung injury in surviving animals precluded any biochemical assessments of TGF-ß levels or fibrosis.
In summary, we have demonstrated that in bleomycin-treated neutrophil elastase-null mice, collagen deposition does not increase despite typical bleomycin-induced injury and inflammation. Neutrophil elastase has been proposed to play a destructive role in lung diseases such as emphysema49 and cystic fibrosis.50 Our data introduce the concept that neutrophil elastase can support matrix production and tissue repair via TGF-ß-mediated pathways. Further studies of the mechanism by which neutrophil elastase activates TGF-ß are needed; however, a re-evaluation of strategies for the use of neutrophil elastase inhibitors in the treatment of lung disease may be warranted.
| Acknowledgements |
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| Footnotes |
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Supported by the Medical Research Council (project grant 9715800 to S.E.M, J.R., A.W.S., and G.J.L.), the Wellcome Trust (training fellowship for Medical and Dental Graduates grant 061554 to F.C., S.E.D., and G.J.L.; and Senior Research Fellowship in Basic Biomedical Sciences grant 047608 to J.R.), the University of London Central Research Fund (to S.E.D.), the British Lung Foundation (research scientist grant P00/4 to S.E.D.), and the American Lung Association (grant RG-029-N to S.E.D.).
F.C. and S.E.D. contributed equally to this study; J.R. and G.J.L. share senior authorship.
Supplemental material for this article can be found on http://ajp.amjpathol.org.
Accepted for publication October 10, 2006.
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