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Electron microscopic study of human lung tissue after in vitro exposure to elastase

SM Morris, PJ Stone and GL Snider

Biochemistry Department, Boston University School of Medicine, Massachusetts 02118.

Much of the experimental evidence supporting the hypothesis that pulmonary emphysema results from an imbalance between elastases and anti-elastases in the lung comes from animal models. The present study was designed to examine the effects on human lung tissue of the two elastases that have been most widely used to produce these animal models. Lung tissue was exposed in vitro to human neutrophil elastase (HNE) or porcine pancreatic elastase (PPE). Although both enzymes solubilized protein at similar rates, PPE solubilized elastin five times faster than did HNE. Ultrastructurally, HNE-exposed tissue exhibited fewer damaged elastic fibers as well as some fibers that were damaged at the edges, whereas the interior of the fiber appeared intact. Elastic fibers showing damage only at the periphery were not seen in tissue exposed to PPE. Immunocytochemical studies in which antibodies to HNE and PPE were applied to thin sections of Lowicryl- embedded tissue indicated that both of these elastases could be detected in association with elastic fibers, but only in areas of the fiber that showed morphological evidence of elastase injury. Both HNE and PPE removed fibronectin from basement membranes (as determined by loss of binding of fibronectin antibodies after exposure to elastase), but neither elastase was detected on basement membrane. Loss of epithelial cells usually accompanied elastic fiber damage by HNE but not PPE.

Volume 41, Issue 6, pp. 851-866, 06/01/1993
Copyright © 1993 by The Histochemical Society


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