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Studies on the Regulation of Secretion in Clara Cells with Evidence for Chemical Nonautonomic Mediation of the Secretory Response to Increased Ventilation in Rat Lungs
Gloria D. Massaro, … , Linda Clerch, Donald Massaro
Gloria D. Massaro, … , Linda Clerch, Donald Massaro
Published September 1, 1982
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 1982;70(3):608-613. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI110653.
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Research Article

Studies on the Regulation of Secretion in Clara Cells with Evidence for Chemical Nonautonomic Mediation of the Secretory Response to Increased Ventilation in Rat Lungs

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Abstract

Using electron microscopy and morphometric methods to assess secretion, we previously found that two times tidal volume ventilation of isolated perfused rat lung stimulates secretion by bronchiolar Clara cells; this effect is not prevented by β-adrenergic blockade (J. Clin. Invest. 1981. 67: 345-351.). In this study we used the isolated perfused rat lung and the anesthetized mechanically ventilated rat, to further study the mechanism by which large tidal volumes stimulate secretion by Clara cells. With the perfused lung we found (a) α-adrenergic inhibition did not block the secretory effect of ventilation at two times normal tidal volume; (b) indomethacin completely blocked the secretory action of two times tidal volume ventilation; (c) medium previously used to perfuse lungs ventilated at two times tidal volume, but not medium previously used to ventilate lungs at normal tidal volume, stimulated secretion by Clara cells when used to perfuse fresh lungs ventilated at tidal volume; (d) addition of prostacyclin to the fresh perfusate increased secretion by Clara cells of lungs ventilated at normal tidal volume. In anesthetized mechanically ventilated rats, sighs stimulated secretion by Clara cells; this increased secretion was inhibited by indomethacin but not by cholinergic blockade (bilateral vagotomy). These studies indicate that increased volume ventilation stimulates secretion by Clara cells in vivo and in vitro; they provide evidence that chemical nonadrenergic, noncholinergic mechanisms are involved in this secretion, and that prostaglandins may be the chemical messenger coupling the mechanico-secretory events.

Authors

Gloria D. Massaro, Ceferina Amado, Linda Clerch, Donald Massaro

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