|
|
|||||||||
|
|
NeoReviews Vol.7 No.2 2006 e88
© 2006 American Academy of Pediatrics

* Programme in Lung Biology, Hospital for Sick Children and University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Department of Paediatrics, Hospital for Sick Children; Departments of Paediatrics and Physiology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Abbreviations: ARDS: acute respiratory distress syndrome CHF: congestive heart failure EF: edema fluid ENaC: epithelial Na+ channel FDLE: fetal distal lung epithelia HMD: hyaline membrane disease nRDS: neonatal respiratory distress syndrome PD: potential difference TTN: transient tachypnea of the newborn
| Objectives |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
In this article, we review how the epithelium of the lung uses the active transport of sodium (Na+), followed by chloride (Cl) and water, from the apical to basolateral side of the alveolar lining cells to clear fluid and how the underlying mechanisms for active Na+ transport are influenced by the degree of fetal lung maturity or the presence of factors within pulmonary edema fluid.
| Fetal Lung Liquid and the Lungs of the Mature Newborn |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
| Cellular Mechanisms That Result in Epithelial Na+ Transport |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
| Conversion of the Perinatal Lung from Fluid Secretion to Fluid Absorption |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The biologic importance of active Na+ transport in the transition from fetal to postnatal life was suggested by fetal experiments, (18)(21) although pharmacologic studies using amiloride, an inhibitor of Na+ transport, provided the first direct evidence that defective Na+ transport was clinically relevant. (22) Otherwise normal newborn animals in which amiloride was instilled into the airspace prior to the first breath had markedly impaired postnatal lung liquid clearance and associated respiratory distress and hypoxemia. (22) After the amiloride-sensitive ENaC was cloned, (15) it was demonstrated that alpha-ENaC knockout mice, although having apparently normal fetal lung development, died shortly after birth of defective ability to clear their lung fluid. (23) It is also known that ENaC mRNA levels increase in fetal rat lung as it matures. (24) Interestingly, patients who have pseudohypoaldosteronism, the "human alpha-ENaC subunit knockout," (25) do not have a comparable marked impairment in clearance of lung liquid at birth, as evidenced by a lack of nRDS at birth. (26) There are several potential explanations for this variation between species, including the possibility that low levels of alpha-ENaC subunits rescue the pseudohypoaldosteronism lung, (27) that the beta-ENaC subunit may be the rate-limiting subunit in human respiratory epithelium as it is for murine lung airway epithelial Na+ transport, (17) or that other Na+-permeant ion channels compensate for deficient ENaC activity.
| Clinical Significance of Inadequate Lung Epithelial Na+ Transport in the Term Newborn |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The observations that infants who had TTN had significantly lower nasal epithelium amiloride-sensitive potential difference (PD) compared with control infants who did not have TTN and that this amiloride-sensitive PD increased as the infants recovered from their disease (29) suggested that TTN results from immature amiloride-sensitive epithelial Na+ transport capacity. Fortunately, these infants have the "usual normal term newborn" 10-fold greater amount of surfactant compared with adults. (30) This helps prevent acute lung injury by keeping the alveolar capillary membrane fully intact, which eventually enables slow absorption of the excess fluid and a relatively benign clinical course.
Cesarean section, relative to vaginal delivery, results in clearance of a greater amount of lung liquid at the time of birth (12) due to at least two factors. First, the infants have not benefited from both the labor process during which fluid could be absorbed following the release of catecholamines and other stimuli that can promote liquid absorption. Second, they would not have had a component of their lung liquid squeezed out the lungs as they passed through the birth canal.
| Clinical Significance of Inadequate Lung Epithelial Na+ Transport in the Preterm Infant |
|---|
|
|
|---|
It is important to note that preterm infants suffering from nRDS also have less amiloride-sensitive transepithelial PD in their nasal respiratory epithelium, (35) presumably reflecting deficient ENaC expression in their respiratory epithelium. This speculation is supported by animal studies that alpha-, beta-, and gamma-ENaC subunit mRNAs are significantly less abundant in the pseudoglandular and canalicular fetal lung development stages than they are in the postnatal lung. (24) Recent studies have shown that preterm human infants who have nRDS have low levels of alpha-, beta-, and gamma-ENaC mRNA. (36)
Ongoing research is attempting to identify strategies whereby ENaC expression and function can be increased and, hence, augment the clearance of airspace fluid in the preterm and already injured lung.
| Proposed Model of nRDS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| Pulmonary Edema Clearance in the Postnatal and Adult Lung |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Matthay and colleagues (41) first showed that passive classic Starling forces could not explain how fluid was reabsorbed from the alveolar space of the adult lung. Shortly thereafter, it was shown that, in a manner similar to fetal lamb studies, clearance could be increased in the adult lung by beta-receptor stimulation. (42) These studies, along with experiments performed with nonprimate mammalian and human distal lung epithelia, (14)(43)(44) demonstrated that edema fluid is cleared from airspaces of the adult lung through the active transport of Na+, with Cl and water following (Fig. 2). Alveolar liquid fluid in humans is cleared at a rate of approximately 25% per hour. (14)(43)(44)
| Clinical Importance of Pulmonary Edema Clearance |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| The Ability of the Lung to "Upregulate" Pulmonary Edema Fluid Clearance |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| Summary |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
Drs Elias and OBrodovich did not disclose any financial relationships relevant to this article.
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
2. Moessinger AC, Collins MH, Blanc WA, Rey HR, James LS. Oligohydramnios-induced lung hypoplasia: the influence of timing and duration in gestation. Pediatr Res. 1986;20 :951 954[Medline]
3. Wallen LD, Perry SF, Alston JT, Maloney JE. Morphometric study of the role of pulmonary arterial flow in fetal lung growth in sheep. Pediatr Res. 1990;27 :122 127[Medline]
4. Wallen LD, Perry SF, Alston JT, Maloney JE. Fetal lung growth. Influence of pulmonary arterial flow and surgery in sheep. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 1994;149 :1005 1011[Abstract]
5. Dickson KA, Maloney JE, Berger PJ. Decline in lung liquid volume before labor in fetal lambs.
J Appl Physiol. 1986;61
:2266
2272
6. Alcorn D, Adamson TM, Lambert TF, Maloney JE, Ritchie BC, Robinson PM. Morphological effects of chronic tracheal ligation and drainage in the fetal lamb lung. J Anat. 1977;123 :649 660[Medline]
7. Moessinger AC, Harding R, Adamson TM, Singh M, Kiu GT. Role of lung fluid volume in growth and maturation of the fetal sheep lung. J Clin Invest. 1990;86 :1270 1277[Medline]
8. Wigglesworth JS, Desai R, Hislop AA. Fetal lung growth in congenital laryngeal atresia. Pediatr Pathol. 1987;7 :515 525[Medline]
9. Adamson TM, Boyd RD, Platt HS, Strang LB. Composition of alveolar liquid in the foetal lamb.
J Physiol. 1969;204
:159
168
10. Olver RE, Strang LB. Ion fluxes across the pulmonary epithelium and the secretion of lung liquid in the foetal lamb.
J Physiol. 1974;241
:327
357
11. Adams FH. Functional development of the fetal lung. J Pediatr. 1966;68 :794 801[Medline]
12. Bland RD, Bressack MA, McMillan DD. Labor decreases the lung water content of newborn rabbits. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 1979;135 :364 367[Medline]
13. Bland RD, Hansen TN, Haberkern CM, et al. Lung fluid balance in lambs before and after birth.
J Appl Physiol. 1982;53
:992
1004
14. Matthay MA, Folkesson HG, Clerici C. Lung epithelial fluid transport and the resolution of pulmonary edema.
Physiol Rev. 2002;82
:569
600
15. Canessa CM, Schild L, Buell G, et al. Amiloride-sensitive epithelial Na+ channel is made of three homologous subunits. Nature. 1994;367 :463 467[Medline]
16. Firsov D, Gautschi I, Merillat AM, Rossier BC, Schild L. The heterotetrameric architecture of the epithelial sodium channel (ENaC). EMBO J. 1998;17 :344 352[Medline]
17. Mall M, Grubb BR, Harkema JR, ONeal WK, Boucher RC. Increased airway epithelial Na+ absorption produces cystic fibrosis-like lung disease in mice. Nat Med. 2004;10 :487 493[Medline]
18. Brown MJ, Olver RE, Ramsden CA, Strang LB, Walters DV. Effects of adrenaline and of spontaneous labour on the secretion and absorption of lung liquid in the fetal lamb.
J Physiol. 1983;344
:137
152
19. Pitkanen O, Tanswell AK, Downey G, OBrodovich H. Increased Po2 alters the bioelectric properties of fetal distal lung epithelium. Am J Physiol. 1996;270 :L1060 L1066[Medline]
20. Barker PM, Gatzy JT. Effect of gas composition on liquid secretion by explants of distal lung of fetal rat in submersion culture. Am J Physiol. 1993;265 :L512 L517[Medline]
21. Olver RE, Ramsden CA, Strang LB, Walters DV. The role of amiloride-blockable sodium transport in adrenaline-induced lung liquid reabsorption in the fetal lamb.
J Physiol. 1986;376
:321
340
22. OBrodovich H, Hannam V, Seear M, Mullen JB. Amiloride impairs lung water clearance in newborn guinea pigs.
J Appl Physiol. 1990;68
:1758
1762
23. Hummler E, Barker P, Gatzy J, et al. Early death due to defective neonatal lung liquid clearance in alpha-ENaC-deficient mice. Nat Genet. 1996;12 :325 328[Medline]
24. Tchepichev S, Ueda J, Canessa C, Rossier BC, OBrodovich H. Lung epithelial Na channel subunits are differentially regulated during development and by steroids. Am J Physiol. 1995;269 :C805 C812[Medline]
25. Chang SS, Grunder S, Hanukoglu A, et al. Mutations in subunits of the epithelial sodium channel cause salt wasting with hyperkalaemic acidosis, pseudohypoaldosteronism type 1. Nat Genet. 1996;12 :248 253[Medline]
26. Kerem E, Bistritzer T, Hanukoglu A, et al. Pulmonary epithelial sodium-channel dysfunction and excess airway liquid in pseudohypoaldosteronism.
N Engl J Med. 1999;341
:156
162
27. Rossier BC. The epithelial sodium channel: activation by membrane-bound serine proteases.
Proc Am Thorac Soc. 2004;1
:4
9
28. Avery ME, Gatewood OB, Brumley G. Transient tachypnea of newborn. Possible delayed resorption of fluid at birth. Am J Dis Child. 1966;111 :380 385[Medline]
29. Gowen CW Jr, Lawson EE, Gingras J, Boucher RC, Gatzy JT, Knowles MR. Electrical potential difference and ion transport across nasal epithelium of term neonates: correlation with mode of delivery, transient tachypnea of the newborn, and respiratory rate. J Pediatr. 1988;113 :121 127[Medline]
30. Jobe A, Ikegami M. Surfactant for the treatment of respiratory distress syndrome. Am Rev Respir Dis. 1987;136 :1256 1275[Medline]
31. OBrodovich HM, Mellins RB. Bronchopulmonary dysplasia. Unresolved neonatal acute lung injury. Am Rev Respir Dis. 1985;132 :694 709[Medline]
32. Farrell PM, Avery ME. Hyaline membrane disease. Am Rev Respir Dis. 1975;111 :657 688[Medline]
33. Jefferies AL, Coates G, OBrodovich H. Pulmonary epithelial permeability in hyaline-membrane disease. N Engl J Med. 1984;311 :1075 1080[Abstract]
34. Vidyasagar D, Shimada S. Pulmonary surfactant replacement in respiratory distress syndrome. Clin Perinatol. 1987;14 :991 1015[Medline]
35. Barker PM, Gowen CW, Lawson EE, Knowles MR. Decreased sodium ion absorption across nasal epithelium of very premature infants with respiratory distress syndrome. J Pediatr. 1997;130 :373 377[Medline]
36. Helve O, Pitkanen OM, Andersson S, OBrodovich H, Kirjavainen T, Otulakowski G. Low expression of human epithelial sodium channel in airway epithelium of preterm infants with respiratory distress.
Pediatrics. 2004;113
:1267
1272
37. OBrodovich HM. Immature epithelial Na+ channel expression is one of the pathogenetic mechanisms leading to human neonatal respiratory distress syndrome. Proc Assoc Am Physicians. 1996;108 :345 355[Medline]
38. OBrodovich H. Pulmonary edema in infants and children. Curr Opin Pediatr. 1005;17 :381 384
39. Bland RD. Edema formation in the newborn lung. Clin Perinatol. 1982;9 :593 611[Medline]
40. Bland RD. Edema formation in the lungs and its relationship to neonatal respiratory distress. Acta Paediatr Scand Suppl. 1983;305 :92 99[Medline]
41. Matthay MA, Landolt CC, Staub NC. Differential liquid and protein clearance from the alveoli of anesthetized sheep.
J Appl Physiol. 1982;53
:96
104
42. Berthiaume Y, Staub NC, Matthay MA. Beta-adrenergic agonists increase lung liquid clearance in anesthetized sheep. J Clin Invest. 1987;79 :335 343[Medline]
43. Matalon S, OBrodovich H. Sodium channels in alveolar epithelial cells: molecular characterization, biophysical properties, and physiological significance. Annu Rev Physiol. 1999;61 :627 661[Medline]
44. OBrodovich H. Disorders of ion transport. In: Haddad G, Abman S, Chernick V, eds. The Basic Mechanisms of Pediatric Respiratory Disease. 2nd ed. New York, NY: B.C. Dekker; 2002:294 311
45. Verghese GM, Ware LB, Matthay BA, Matthay MA. Alveolar epithelial fluid transport and the resolution of clinically severe hydrostatic pulmonary edema.
J Appl Physiol. 1999;87
:1301
1312
46. Ware LB, Matthay MA. Alveolar fluid clearance is impaired in the majority of patients with acute lung injury and the acute respiratory distress syndrome.
Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2001;163
:1376
1383
47. Rafii B, Gillie DJ, Sulowski C, et al. Pulmonary oedema fluid induces non-alpha-ENaC-dependent Na(+) transport and fluid absorption in the distal lung.
J Physiol. 2002;544
:537
548
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | CONTACT US | SUBSCRIPTIONS | CME | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |