Abstract

Hamsters exposed to an intratracheal instillation of human neutrophil elastase (HNE) accumulate an abnormally high number of secretory granules in bronchial but not tracheal epithelial cells. We employed lectin cytochemistry to investigate possible differences in the epithelial cell surface glycoconjugate layer in trachea compared to bronchus which might explain the regional dissimilarity in response to HNE. Portions of glutaraldehyde-fixed trachea and bronchi were incubated in one of several ferritin-labeled lectins prior to embedding for transmission electron microscopy. Lectins from Ricinus communis, Helix pomatia, and Triticum vulgaris bound to the surface of tracheal secretory cells in moderate to profuse amounts, while most bronchial secretory cells showed little or no label with these lectins. Gold-labeled Helix pomatia agglutinin (HPA), a lectin specific for secretory cells, showed a decrease in surface binding to all tracheal secretory cell types within 2 h of HNE instillation, compared to saline controls. In contrast, the majority of bronchial secretory cells showed an HNE-induced increase in surface label from extremely low levels in saline controls. The low levels of lectin binding to bronchial cells, in contrast to the trachea, may indicate the lack of a protective surface glycoconjugate coat, thus explaining the vulnerability of these cells to HNE. The rise in number of accessible HPA binding sites on the surface of bronchial secretory cells exposed to HNE may represent an important event in the pathologic accumulation of secretory granules by these cells.

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