Coumarin was used as a model Clara cell toxicant to test the hypothesis that tolerance to injury requires increased γ-glutamyl transpeptidase (GGT) activity. Wildtype (GGT+/+) and GGT-deficient (GGT−/−) mice on a C57BL/6/129SvEv hybrid background were dosed orally with corn oil (vehicle) or coumarin (200mg/kg). In vehicle-treated mice, Clara cell secretory protein (CC10) expression was distributed throughout the bronchiolar epithelium. After one dose of coumarin, CC10 expression was dramatically reduced and the bronchiolar epithelium was devoid of Clara cells in GGT+/+ and GGT−/− mice. In wildtype mice, 9 doses of coumarin produced tolerance, characterized as a renewed bronchiolar epithelium with Clara cells expressing CC10 along with a 40% increase in total glutathione (GSH) and a 7-fold increase in GGT activity in the lung. In contrast, tolerance was not observed in GGT−/− mice. To assess whether changes in whole lung levels of GSH and GGT activity reflect Clara cell specific changes an enriched population of cells was isolated from female wildtype B6C3F1 mice made tolerant to coumarin. Compared to Clara cells from control mice, GSH and GGT activity increased 3- and 13-fold, respectively. Collectively, these data suggest Clara cell tolerance to coumarin toxicity requires increased GGT activity favoring enhanced GSH synthesis.
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