Tropoelastin was isolated from the aortas of chicks rendered lathyritic by treatment with beta-aminopropionitrile. The soluble elastin was judged homogeneous by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and possessed an estimated molecular weight of 70000. Automated sequential analysis revealed that the N-terminal region of the chick tropoelastin is very homologous to tropoelastin isolated from copper-deficient piglets. N-terminal analysis of a trypsin digest of chick tropoelastin showed that tyrosine frequently is found adjacent to lysine residues. This positioning of tyrosine residues may be significant in terms of a possible regulatory role in elastin cross-link formation.
Elastin accumulation in the extracellular matrix of cultured rat aortic smooth muscle cells was monitored as a function of age. The effect of the animal donor age and time in culture in single or consecutive passages on the cells' ability to accumulate total protein as well as elastin was evaluated. Smooth muscle cells were obtained from animals ranging in age from 2 d to 36 mo. Protein accumulation by the cells based on DNA content was similar regardless of which of the above aging parameters was examined. Although there were significant amounts of elastin present in the extracellular matrix of those cells originating from the younger animals (2 d and 6 wk old), little or none was detected in cell cultures derived from the oldest animals. A soluble elastin-like fraction which was isolated from the cultures of the 2-d-old rats seemed to be lacking in the cultures of cells from the 36-mo-old animals. This observation may, in part, explain the absence of insoluble elastin in the matrix of some cultures obtained from older animals. The data strongly suggest that the age of the donor animal from which the cells originate has the greatest influence on in vitro elastin accumulation.
To determine whether lung elastin is lost during the evolution of cadmium-induced air-space enlargement with pulmonary fibrosis, the lung elastin of 5- to 7-day-old golden Syrian hamster pups was radiolabeled by giving [3H]valine. At maturity, a single intratracheal instillation of 0.5 ml of 0.025% CdCl2 solution was given. Lung mechanics, histologic examination, and biochemistry were studied 5, 10, 21, 42, 105, and 180 days after the cadmium treatment. The animals developed fibrosis and air-space enlargement with decreased lung volumes, compliance, and forced expiratory flow; their functional residual capacity was increased. The total lung collagen and total lung elastin were increased, but there was no loss of radiolabel in lung elastin. We conclude that CdCl2-induced air-space enlargement with pulmonary fibrosis is not accompanied by loss of neonatally formed lung elastic fibers. We hypothesize that air-space enlargement with fibrosis represents a stereotyped response of the lung to fibrosing injuries, which we hypothesize is due to forces from more fibrotic and atelectatic areas causing overdistension of less abnormal air spaces. The air-space enlargement of fibrosing human diseases such as sarcoidosis and eosinophilic granuloma may have a similar basis. Evidence is reviewed that human centrilobular emphysema may be a form of focal air-space enlargement with interstitial fibrosis; there may be mechanisms in addition to elastase-antielastase imbalance that cause human emphysema.
The accuracy of methods employed to measure the elastin-specific crosslinks, desmosine (DES) and isodesmosine (IDES), has been called into question because contaminants in the urine may cause elevated values. In the present study urine samples were spiked with a known amount of [14C]DES and refluxed in 6 N HCl. Sephadex G-15 chromatography of the hydrolyzed urine employed to remove contaminants. DES and IDES were quantified by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) as well as by amino acid analysis. The amount of isotope recovered was used to determine losses during the overall procedure and the isotope dilution to calculate the amounts of endogenous DES and IDES originally present in the urine. Because similar values were obtained by both methods, the more rapid HPLC method was used for all succeeding analyses. In one experiment, the DES amounts in urine collected from hamsters for 3 days after intratracheal treatment with human neutrophil elastase (300 micrograms) or porcine pancreatic elastase (300 micrograms) were 0.212 +/- 0.012 (mean +/- SEM, two measurements on a single pool) and 0.816 +/- 0.005 (two measurements) microgram per hamster per day, respectively. Urine from control hamsters had a mean value of 0.074 +/- 0.008 (eight measurements) microgram per hamster per day. The HNE- and PPE-treated hamsters had mean linear intercept values of 119 and 159% of control values, respectively, giving a positive correlation between increase in airspace size and elevation of urinary DES.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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