Abstract

IntroductionLung fibrosis, reduced lung compliance, and severe hypoxemia found in patients with acute lung injury often result in a need for the support of mechanical ventilation. High-tidal-volume mechanical ventilation can increase lung damage and fibrogeneic activity but the mechanisms regulating the interaction between high tidal volume and lung fibrosis are unclear. We hypothesized that high-tidal-volume ventilation increased pulmonary fibrosis in acute lung injury via the serine/threonine kinase-protein kinase B (Akt) and mitogen-activated protein kinase pathways.MethodsAfter 5 days of bleomycin administration to simulate acute lung injury, male C57BL/6 mice, weighing 20 to 25 g, were exposed to either high-tidal-volume mechanical ventilation (30 ml/kg) or low-tidal-volume mechanical ventilation (6 ml/kg) with room air for 1 to 5 hours.ResultsHigh-tidal-volume ventilation induced type I and type III procollagen mRNA expression, microvascular permeability, hydroxyproline content, Masson's trichrome staining, S100A4/fibroblast specific protein-1 staining, activation of Akt and extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) 1/2, and production of macrophage inflammatory protein-2 and 10 kDa IFNγ-inducible protein in a dose-dependent manner. High-tidal-volume ventilation-induced lung fibrosis was attenuated in Akt-deficient mice and in mice with pharmacologic inhibition of ERK1/2 activity by PD98059.ConclusionWe conclude that high-tidal-volume ventilation-induced microvascular permeability, lung fibrosis, and chemokine production were dependent, in part, on activation of the Akt and ERK1/2 pathways.

Highlights

  • Lung fibrosis, reduced lung compliance, and severe hypoxemia found in patients with acute lung injury often result in a need for the support of mechanical ventilation

  • High-tidalvolume ventilation-induced lung fibrosis was attenuated in Aktdeficient mice and in mice with pharmacologic inhibition of ERK1/2 activity by PD98059

  • We conclude that high-tidal-volume ventilationinduced microvascular permeability, lung fibrosis, and chemokine production were dependent, in part, on activation of the activation of serine/threonine kinase/protein kinase B (Akt) and ERK1/2 pathways

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Summary

Introduction

Lung fibrosis, reduced lung compliance, and severe hypoxemia found in patients with acute lung injury often result in a need for the support of mechanical ventilation. We hypothesized that high-tidal-volume ventilation increased pulmonary fibrosis in acute lung injury via the serine/ threonine kinase-protein kinase B (Akt) and mitogen-activated protein kinase pathways. Death or long-term ventilator dependence after an episode of acute lung injury (ALI) is often a result of abnormal wound healing, characterized by overwhelming fibrosis, severe hypoxemia, and loss of lung compliance [3,4,5]. Akt = serine/threonine kinase/protein kinase B; ALI = acute lung injury; ARDS = acute respiratory distress syndrome; ERK = extracellular signal-regulated kinase; FSP1 = fibroblast-specific protein 1; GAPDH = glyceraldehyde-phosphate dehydrogenase; IFN = interferon; IL = interleukin; IP-10 = 10 kDa IFNγ-inducible protein; JNK = c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase; MAPK = mitogen-activated protein kinase; MIP-2 = murine macrophage inflammatory protein-2; PBS = phosphate-buffered saline; PCR = polymerase chain reaction; RT = reverse transcriptase; TNF = tumor necrosis factor; VILI = ventilator-induced lung injury; VT = tidal volume. In ALI there is an initial accumulation of neutrophils and a later loss of adhesion of epithelial cells to the basement membrane, which induces the epithelia to express inflammatory mediators such as macrophage inflammatory protein-2 (MIP-2) and 10 kDa IFNγ-inducible protein (IP-10) [8,9,10,11]

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