Abstract

Human airways and glands express the anion channel cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator, CFTR, and the epithelial Na(+) channel, ENaC. Cystic fibrosis (CF) airway glands fail to secrete mucus in response to vasoactive intestinal peptide or forskolin; the failure was attributed to loss of CFTR-mediated anion and fluid secretion. Alternatively, CF glands might secrete acinar fluid via CFTR-independent pathways, but the exit of mucus from the glands could be blocked by hyperabsorption of fluid in the gland ducts. This could occur because CFTR loss can disinhibit ENaC, and ENaC activity can drive absorption. To test these two hypotheses, we measured single gland mucus secretion optically and applied ENaC inhibitors to determine whether they augmented secretion. Human CF glands were pretreated with benzamil and then stimulated with forskolin in the continued presence of benzamil. Benzamil did not rescue the lack of secretion to forskolin (50 glands, 6 CF subjects) nor did it increase the rate of cholinergically mediated mucus secretion from CF glands. Finally, neither benzamil nor amiloride increased forskolin-stimulated mucus secretion from porcine submucosal glands (75 glands, 7 pigs). One possible explanation for these results is that ENaC within the gland ducts was not active in our experiments. Consistent with that possibility, we discovered that human airway glands express Kunitz-type and non-Kunitz serine protease inhibitors, which might prevent proteolytic activation of ENaC. Our results suggest that CF glands do not display excessive, ENaC-mediated fluid absorption, leaving defective, anion-mediated fluid secretion as the most likely mechanism for defective mucus secretion from CF glands.

Highlights

  • What role does ENaC play in submucosal glands, and how is it regulated? Nothing is known about the activity or function of ENaC within submucosal glands, but in the ciliated cells of the airway surface ENaC is complexly regulated

  • We found no evidence that ENaC inhibitors altered secretion rates in either normal or Cystic fibrosis (CF) glands

  • Confirmation of Minimal Responses of CF Glands Stimulated with VIP/Forskolin—Human airway glands from donors and from patients with lung diseases other than CF, as well as airway glands from pigs, secret mucus in response to VIP or forskolin [4, 18, 20]

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Summary

Introduction

What role does ENaC play in submucosal glands, and how is it regulated? Nothing is known about the activity or function of ENaC within submucosal glands, but in the ciliated cells of the airway surface ENaC is complexly regulated. These results are discussed in terms of a hypothesis that innate anti-serine proteases modify ENaC activity both within glands and on the surface of the airways.

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