Phosphatidylcholine molecular species in lung surfactant: composition in relation to respiratory rate and lung development

W Bernhard, S Hoffmann, H Dombrowsky… - American journal of …, 2001 - atsjournals.org
W Bernhard, S Hoffmann, H Dombrowsky, GA Rau, A Kamlage, M Kappler, JJ Haitsma…
American journal of respiratory cell and molecular biology, 2001atsjournals.org
Surfactant reduces surface tension at the air–liquid interface of lung alveoli. While
dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (PC16: 0/16: 0) is its main component, proteins and other
phospholipids contribute to the dynamic properties and homeostasis of alveolar surfactant.
Among these components are significant amounts of palmitoylmyristoylphosphatidylcholine
(PC16: 0/14: 0) and palmitoylpalmitoleoylphosphatidylcholine (PC16: 0/16: 1), whereas in
surfactant from the rigid tubular bird lung, PC16: 0/14: 0 is absent and PC16: 0/16: 1 strongly …
Surfactant reduces surface tension at the air–liquid interface of lung alveoli. While dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (PC16:0/ 16:0) is its main component, proteins and other phospholipids contribute to the dynamic properties and homeostasis of alveolar surfactant. Among these components are significant amounts of palmitoylmyristoylphosphatidylcholine (PC16:0/ 14:0) and palmitoylpalmitoleoylphosphatidylcholine (PC16:0/ 16:1), whereas in surfactant from the rigid tubular bird lung, PC16:0/14:0 is absent and PC16:0/16:1 strongly diminished. We therefore hypothesized that the concentrations of PC16:0/14:0 and PC16:0/16:1 in surfactants correlate with differences in the respiratory physiology of mammalian species. In surfactants from newborn and adult mice, rats, and pigs, molar fractions of PC16:0/14:0 and PC16:0/16:1 correlated with respiratory rate. Labeling experiments with [methyl-3H]choline in mice and perfused rat lungs demonstrated identical alveolar proportions of total and newly synthesized PC16:0/14:0, PC16:0/16:1, and PC16:0/16:0, which were much higher than those of other phosphatidylcholine species. In surfactant from human term and preterm neonates, fractional concentrations not only of PC16:0/16:0 but also of PC16:0/14:0 and PC16:0/ 16:1 increased with maturation. Our data emphasize that PC16:0/14:0 and PC16:0/16:1 may be important surfactant components in alveolar lungs, and that their concentrations are adapted to respiratory physiology.
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