The Clara cell is believed to be the progenitor of the peripheral airway epithelium, and it produces the surfactant proteins SP-A and SP-B, in addition to the 10-kDa Clara cell secretory protein (CCSP or CC10). To date, attempts to develop Clara cell lines have been unsuccessful. Most such attempts have involved the in vitro insertion of a transforming viral oncogene. We have reported previously the characterization of a differentiated conditionally immortalized murine lung Type II epithelial cell line, T7, from the H-2Kb-tsA58 transgenic mouse. We have also used this mouse model to derive Clara cell lines. In this model, the need for in vitro gene insertion is circumvented by the creation of a transgene, in which the large tumor antigen of a temperature-sensitive strain (tsA58) of the simian virus 40 (SV40) is fused with the major histocompatibility complex promoter H-2Kb. The promoter is active in a wide range of tissues and is induced by interferons (IFN). From the lungs of animals harboring the hybrid construct, we isolated and characterized Clara cells. The cells contain dense secretory granules and mitochondria typical of Clara cells, and express SP-A, SP-B, SP-D, and the Clara cell secretory protein, CC10. Withdrawal of the IFN and elevation of the incubation temperature permit normal cell differentiation similar to that of Clara cells in vivo. This cell line should be very useful for the investigation of normal Clara cell function and gene expression.
Two antisera, denoted R41 and R42, were raised against a synthetic peptide from the murine Clara cell-specific protein CC10, and one antiserum, denoted R40, was raised against human recombinant uteroglobin, the human homolog of murine CC10. Purified antigenspecific antisera, denoted R40AP, R41AP, and R42AP were prepared using peptide columns. The purified antisera were characterized by dot blots, immunohistochemistry, and immunoblots. Immunohistochemistry of mouse lung showed specific labeling of Clara cells in distal bronchioles by all three antisera. In human lung, the antiuteroglobin antiserum specifically labeled Clara cells, while the anti-mouse peptide antisera had weak crossreactivity and higher background staining. Electron microscopy revealed immunogold labeling of CC10 granules in Clara cells of mouse lung with all antisera. All antisera also labeled a 5-kDa protein on immunoblots of mouse lung homogenates. The surface epithelium of the alveolar air spaces around the distal bronchioles were CC10 positive suggesting a functional activity for CC10 in the lung parenchyma distal to Clara cells. R40AP immunohistochemical staining of sections of normal human lungs and lungs from patients with surfactant protein B deficiency, bronchopneumonia, and idiopathic alveolar proteinosis illustrate the utility of the anti-human CC10 antibody for diagnostic pathology.
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