[HTML][HTML] Alveolar epithelial ion and fluid transport: recent progress

HG Folkesson, MA Matthay - American journal of respiratory cell …, 2006 - atsjournals.org
HG Folkesson, MA Matthay
American journal of respiratory cell and molecular biology, 2006atsjournals.org
Studies of epithelial ion and fluid transport across the distal pulmonary epithelia have
provided important new concepts regarding the resolution of pulmonary edema, specifically
the removal of edema from the distal airspaces of the lung. Overall, there is convincing
evidence that vectorial ion transport across the alveolar and distal airway epithelia is the
primary determinant of alveolar fluid clearance (AFC). The general paradigm is that active
Na and Cl transport drives net alveolar fluid clearance, as demonstrated in several different …
Studies of epithelial ion and fluid transport across the distal pulmonary epithelia have provided important new concepts regarding the resolution of pulmonary edema, specifically the removal of edema from the distal airspaces of the lung. Overall, there is convincing evidence that vectorial ion transport across the alveolar and distal airway epithelia is the primary determinant of alveolar fluid clearance (AFC). The general paradigm is that active Na and Cl transport drives net alveolar fluid clearance, as demonstrated in several different species, including the human lung. The objective of this article is to consider some areas of recent progress in the field of alveolar fluid transport under normal and pathologic conditions. More detailed reviews of this field including studies of the immature and the newborn lung are available (1–10).
In the lung, as in other epithelia, ion transporters and other membrane proteins are asymmetrically distributed on opposing cell surfaces, conferring vectorial transport properties to the polarized epithelial cells (Figure 1). There are epithelial cells in the distal airway epithelia, such as Clara cells, that are capable of vectorial ion transport. The vast majority of the surface area available for transport in the distal lung is occupied by the alveolar epithelial type I (ATI) and type II cells (ATII). Tight junctions populate these epithelial cells near their apical surfaces, thereby sustaining apical and basolateral cell polarity (11). The permeability of tight junctions is dynamic and regulated, in part, by cytoskeletal proteins and intracellular Ca concentrations and possibly by ion channels (11).
ATS Journals