Oxygen and steroids affect the regulatory role of natriuretic peptide receptor-C on surfactant secretion by type II cells

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LUNG CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR PHYSIOLOGY(2022)

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摘要
Atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) and its receptors natriuretic peptide receptor (NPR)-A and NPR-C are all highly expressed in alveolar epithelial type II cells (AEC2s) in the late-gestation ovine fetal lung and are dramatically decreased postnatally. However, of all the components, NPR-C stimulation inhibits ANP-mediated surfactant secretion. Since alveolar oxygen increases dramatically after birth, and steroids are administered to mothers antenatally to enhance surfactant lung maturity, we investigated the effects of O-2 concentration and steroids on NPR-C-mediated surfactant secretion in AEC2s. NPR-C expression was highest at 5% O-2 while being suppressed by 21% O-2, in cultured mouse lung epithelial cells (MLE-15s) and/or human primary AEC2s. Surfactant protein-B (SP-B) was significantly elevated in media from both in vitro and ex vivo culture at 13% O-2 versus 21% O-2 in the presence of ANP or terbutaline (TER). Both ANP and C-ANP (an NPR-C agonist) attenuated TER-induced SP-B secretion; this effect was reversed by dexamethasone (DEX) pretreatment in AEC2s and by transfection with NPR-C siRNA in MLE-15 cells. DEX markedly reduced AEC2 NPR-C expression, and pregnant ewes treated with betamethasone showed reduced ANP in fetal sheep lung fluid. These data suggest that elevated O-2 downregulates AEC2 NPR-C and that steroid-mediated NPR-C downregulation in neonatal lungs may provide a novel mechanism for their effect on perinatal surfactant production.
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关键词
atrial natriuretic peptide, natriuretic peptide receptor-C, neonatal lung biology, oxygen, surfactant protein-B
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