Recombinant Human Elafin Promotes Alveologenesis in Newborn Mice Exposed to Chronic Hyperoxia

Authors

Wenli Han, Xiaomei Li, Han Zhang, Benli Yu, Chunbao Guo, Chun Deng

Abstract

Background/Aims
Elastase inhibitors reverse elastin degradation and abnormal alveologenesis and attenuate the lung structural abnormalities induced by mechanical ventilation with O2-rich gas. The potential of these molecules to improve endothelial function and to ameliorate severe bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) during lung development is not yet understood. We sought to determine whether the intratracheal treatment of newborn mice with the elastase inhibitor elafin would prevent hyperoxia-induced lung elastin degradation and the cascade of events that cause abnormal alveologenesis.

Methods
Newborn mice were exposed to 85% O2 for 3, 7, 14 or 21 days. Recombinant human elafin was administered administered by intratracheal instillation from the first day every two days for 20 days. We next used morphometric analyses, quantitative RT-PCR, immunostaining, Western blotting, and ELISA methods to assess the key variables involved in elastogenesis disruption and the potential signaling pathways noted below in recombinant human elafin-treated mouse pups that had been exposed to 85% O2.

Results
We found that impaired alveolar development and aberrant elastin production were associated with elevations in whole lung elastase levels in 85% O2-exposed lungs. Elafin attenuated the structural disintegration that developed in the hyperoxia-damaged lungs. Furthermore, elafin prevented the elastin degradation, neutrophil influx, activation of TGF-β1 and apoptosis caused by 85% O2 exposure.

Conclusions
Pulmonary elastase plays an important role in disrupting elastogenesis during O2-induced damage, which is the result of a pulmonary inflammatory response. Elafin prevents these changes by inhibiting elastase and the TGF-β1 signalling cascade and may be a new therapeutic target for preventing O2-induced lung injury in neonates.