The respiratory epithelium is frequently injured by inhaled toxic agents or by micro-organisms. The epithelial wound repair represents a crucial process by which surface respiratory cells maintain the epithelial barrier integrity. The repair process involves both cell migration and proliferation, but as yet, the kinetic of these two mechanisms has not been extensively studied. Using an in vitro model of human respiratory epithelium wound repair, proliferative cell immunofluorescent staining and a computer-assisted technique allowing the tracking of living cells, we studied the cell proliferation and migration during the wound repair process. Respiratory epithelial cells were dissociated from human nasal polyps and cultured on a collagen I matrix. At confluency, a chemical wound was made on the culture. We observed that the cell mitotic activity peaked at 48 h after wounding (23% of the cells) and mainly concerned the cells located 160 to 400 µm from the wound edge. The migration speed was highest (35 to 45 µm/h) for the spreading cells at the wound edge and progressively decreased for the cells more and more distant from the wound edge. The temporal analysis of the cell migration speed during the wound repair showed that it was almost constant during the first 3 days of the repair mechanism and thereafter dropped down until the wound closure was completed (after 4 days). We also observed that over a 1-hour period, the intra-individual and interindividual variation of the cell migration speed was 43% and 37%, respectively. These results demonstrate that cell proliferation and cell migration during respiratory epithelial wound repair are differently expressed with regard to the cell location within the repairing area.
Following epithelial injury, extracellular matrix undergoes imposing remodelings. We examined the contribution of matrix metalloproteinases, gelatinases A and B, in an in vitro wound repair model of human respiratory epithelium. Confluent human surface respiratory epithelial (HSRE) cells cultured from dissociated surface cells of human nasal polyps were chemically injured. Over the next 3 to 5 days, cells migrated onto the injured area to repair the circular wound. Repair kinetics of these wounds was monitored until wound closure occurred. Gelatinolytic activities were analysed in culture supernates and in cell protein extracts derived from repairing migratory and non repairing stationary cells. Small amounts of gelatinase A were expressed by HSRE cells, and variations of this gelatinase remained very weak for the time of the wound repair. In contrast, gelatinase B was upregulated during the wound repair process, with a maximum peak observed at wound closure. A marked gelatinase B activation occurred only in cells involved in the repair process. Gelatinase B was localized in some migratory basal cells, recognized by an anti-cytokeratin 14 antibody and located around the wound. We could not detect any gelatinase A in repairing or in stationary HSRE cells. Addition of the 6-6B monoclonal antibody, known to inhibit gelatinase B activation, to the culture medium during the repair process resulted in a dose-dependent decrease of the wound repair speed. These results suggest that gelatinase B, produced by epithelial cells, actively contributes to the wound repair process of the respiratory epithelium.
The cell migration that occurs during wound repair is dependent on modifications of the cell-matrix interaction in which extracellular matrix proteins and their receptors, the integrins, are involved. To study the interactions between airway epithelial cells and the extracellular matrix during the process of wound repair, we developed an in vitro wound model of human epithelial cells. Surface epithelial cells were dissociated from human nasal polyps and cultured on a type I collagen matrix. At confluency, a wound was made by the addition of 2 microliters of NaOH (1 N) to the cell culture. After the cell culture was washed, the wound area was recorded every 12 h for 96 h by a videomicroscopic technique. We calculated the wound-repair index that represents the decrease in the wound area per hour. Using immunofluorescence techniques, we first examined the localization, during wound repair, of fibronectin and of the beta 1-, alpha v-, alpha 2-, alpha 3-, and alpha 5-integrin subunits. Secondly, we carried out a series of wound-repair blocking experiments with the use of anti-integrin or anti-fibronectin antibodies diluted in the culture medium. We observed that fibronectin and the alpha 5- integrin subunit were exclusively expressed by the migratory cells in the wounded area. No difference in the localization of the alpha v-, alpha 2-, and alpha 3-integrin subunits was observed between the nonrepairing and repairing cells. The blocking experiments showed a significant decrease in the wound-repair index in the presence of either the anti-beta 1, -alpha 3, alpha 5, or the anti-fibronectin antibodies. Furthermore, the addition of fibronectin to the culture medium induced a significant increase in the wound repair index. These results suggest that fibronectin and the corresponding alpha 5 beta 1-integrin play an important role in the process of airway epithelium wound repair.
The surface epithelium of the airway mucosa forms a continuous barrier to a wide number of noxious substances present in the lumen. The restoration of the barrier integrity after injury represents a key issue in the defense capacity of the airway epithelium. Using an in vitro wound repair model of the airway epithelium, we investigated the dynamic of the restoration of the epithelial barrier integrity during the wound repair process. Airway epithelial cells in culture were chemically wounded by sodium hydroxide. The immunolocalization of zonula occludens 1 (ZO-1), a cytoplasmic protein associated with the tight junctions, was examined during the wound repair process. Junctional integrity was examined by analyzing the transepithelial resistance (TER) and the permeability to [3H]mannitol and by visualizing the permeability to lanthanum nitrate during 5 days after injury. Immediately after injury, we simultaneously observed a 36.7% decrease in the TER and a 74.9% rise in the permeability to [3H]mannitol. In addition, lanthanum nitrate penetrated in the intercellular spaces in the repairing areas, which was also characterized by the absence of ZO-1 staining, as opposed to nonrepairing cells. TER and [3H]mannitol flux values as well as lanthanum nitrate and ZO-1 localizations were found to be similar to those observed in confluent cultures only 1 to 2 days after complete wound closure. This study demonstrates that using our culture model, confluent airway epithelial cells form a continuous and efficient barrier with tight junctions. Epithelial integrity is affected immediately after injury and is completely restored within 1 to 2 days after wound closure. During such a period of time, the airway epithelium may remain exposed to the noxious effect of environment in vivo, which can prevent the epithelial barrier restoration by modifying tight junction formation.
Human nasal polyps in outgrowth culture were used to study the Pseudomonas aeruginosa adhesion to respiratory cells. By scanning electron microscopy, P. aeruginosa were seen associated with ciliated cells, but by transmission electron microscopy, bacteria were never seen at the interciliary spaces or attached along cilia, but were identified trapped at the extremities of cilia, usually as bacterial aggregates. A fibronectin-containing fibrillar material was seen associated with aggregated bacteria. By time-lapse video microscopy, bacteria were seen to aggregate in the culture medium following their addition to the culture wells. Progressively, these aggregates were trapped by cilia or attached to migrating cells of a lower cell layer that protruded beneath the upper layer cells, at the outgrowth periphery. P. aeruginosa adhesion to these lower cell layer migrating cells was significantly higher than to ciliated or nonciliated cells of the upper cell layer. Migrating cells were intensely labeled by the complexes Con A and arachis hypogea agglutinin (PNA)-FITC, in contrast to the other cells. The percentage of PNA-labeled cells with attached bacteria was significantly higher than that without bacteria. These results suggest that changes of cell surface glycoconjugates related with cell migration may favor P. aeruginosa adhesion to respiratory cells. (J. Clin.
To mimic the effect of ischemia on the integrity of airway epithelium and expression of cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR), we induced an ATP depletion of the respiratory epithelium from upper airway cells (nasal tissue) and human bronchial epithelial 16HBE14o ؊ cell line. Histological analysis showed that 2 h of ATP depletion led to a loss of the epithelium integrity at the interface between basal cells and columnar cells. The expression of connexin 43 (Cx43, subunit of the gap junctions) and desmoplakins 1 and 2 (DPs 1 and 2, major components of the desmosomes) proteins was inhibited. After 90 min of ATP depletion, a significant decrease of the transepithelial resistance (25%) was observed but was reversible. Similar results were obtained with the 16HBE14o؊ human bronchial epithelial cell line. ATP depletion led to actin filaments depolymerization. The expression of the mature CFTR (170 kDa) and fodrin proteins at the apical domain of the ciliated cells was down-regulated. The steady-state levels of CFTR, Cx43, DPs 1 and 2 mRNAs, semiquantified by RT-polymerase chain reaction kinetics, remained constant throughout ATP depletion in nasal tissue as in the homogeneous cell population of 16HBE14o ؊ human bronchial epithelial cell line. This suggests that the down-regulation of these proteins might be posttranscriptional. The intercellular diffusion through gap junctions of Lucifer dye was completely inhibited after 90 min of ATP depletion but was reversible. The volume-dependent and the cAMPdependent chloride secretion were inhibited in a nonreversible way. Taken together, these results suggest that an ATP depletion in human airway epithelium, mimicking ischemia, may induce a marked alteration in the junctional complexes and cytoskeleton structure concomitantly with a loss of apical CFTR expression and chloride secretion function.
To investigate the efficiency of adenovirus-mediated gene delivery in regenerating human respiratory epithelium, we have performed infections with an E1- and E3-deleted type 5 recombinant adenovirus containing the Escherichia coli LacZ reporter gene on different culture models of regenerating human nasal polyp surface epithelium. These models included: (i) an ex vivo organ culture of nasal polyp tissue, (ii) an explant outgrowth cell culture, and (iii) an in vitro wound repair model, on dissociated cells. In ex vivo nasal polyp tissue, transduced cells were not detected in normal pseudostratified areas, but were found in areas of the surface epithelium with a morphology reminiscent of regenerating airway tissue. In the explant outgrowth cell culture, adenovirus-infected cells were preferentially detected at the periphery of the outgrowth. These transducible epithelial cells, representative of epithelial cells present in vivo during the process of surface airway epithelium regeneration, were shown to be migrating and poorly differentiated cells, which were proliferating or not. In the in vitro wound repair model, the efficiency of cell transduction was much higher in cells present in the wound area than in those far from the wound area. These results indicate that regenerating cells from human airway surface epithelium represent preferential targets for transgene expression, and suggest that efficiency of CFTR gene transfer by recombinant adenovirus vectors may be higher in regenerating CF airway mucosa than in normal tissue. However, since these cells do not show endogenous CFTR expression, the relevance of their preferential transduction for the functional correction of the ion transport defect in cystic fibrosis needs further investigations.
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