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Endocrinology Vol. 142, No. 5 1814-1819
Copyright © 2001 by The Endocrine Society


ARTICLES

Role of Keratinocyte Growth Factor in the Control of Surfactant Synthesis by Fetal Lung Mesenchyme

Nadia Chelly, Alexandra Henrion, Claudie Pinteur, Bernadette Chailley-Heu and Jacques R. Bourbon

INSERM Unit 319, Développement Normal et Pathologique des Fonctions Epitheliales, Université Paris 7-Denis Diderot, 75251 Paris, France

Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Jacques R. Bourbon, INSERM U319, Université Paris 7-Denis Diderot, Tour 33-43, Case courrier 7126, 2 Place Jussieu, 75251 Paris Cedex 05, France. E-mail: bourbon{at}paris7.jussieu.fr


    Abstract
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Materials and Methods
 Results
 Discussion
 References
 
Fetal lung maturation is regulated by mesenchymal-epithelial cell communication, which plays a major role in the control of surfactant synthesis by alveolar type II cells. We have recently shown that keratinocyte growth factor (KGF), also called fibroblast growth factor-7, enhances the maturation of fetal alveolar epithelial type II cells. Here, we investigated, among the factors produced by lung mesenchyme, the part attributable to KGF in the control of surfactant synthesis. Using a KGF-neutralizing antibody, we assessed surfactant phospholipid synthesis by measuring choline incorporation into disaturated phosphatidylcholine of isolated fetal type II cells. We found that KGF accounts for about half of the stimulating activity present in fetal lung fibroblast-conditioned medium (FCM). By contrast, the use of an epidermal growth factor-neutralizing antibody did not alter the FCM-stimulating activity. To further delineate KGF properties as a mesenchymal mediator, we wondered about its possibility to relay glucocorticoid-stimulating activity on the synthesis of the phospholipid moiety of surfactant in fetal lung fibroblasts. A 24-h exposure to dexamethasone led us to detect a 50% increase in the level of KGF messenger RNA (mRNA) in isolated fetal lung fibroblasts. Moreover, anti-KGF antibody totally abolished the further increase of FCM-stimulating activity induced by dexamethasone. Thus, KGF seems to be a major player in mediating glucocorticoid stimulation of fetal lung maturation.


    Introduction
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Materials and Methods
 Results
 Discussion
 References
 
RESPIRATORY DISTRESS SYNDROME in preterm infants is caused by surfactant deficiency. It has long been recognized that maternal administration of glucocorticoids increases fetal surfactant production (reviewed in 1). Surfactant is a phospholipid-rich material produced by mature alveolar epithelial type II cells in late lung development. Direct exposure of fetal type II cells to glucocorticoids was shown to have minimal effect on surfactant phospholipid synthesis; whereas, when fetal rat lung fibroblasts were exposed to dexamethasone, and conditioned medium was prepared, the conditioned medium stimulated surfactant disaturated phosphatidylcholine (DSPC) synthesis in type II cells (2, 3). Thus, type II cell maturation is determined by mesenchymal-epithelial interactions (1, 4). This led to the assumption of the existence of a mesenchymal factor, so-called fibroblast-pneumonocyte factor (FPF), present in fibroblast-conditioned medium (FCM), which would mediate glucocorticoid stimulus (2). Although FPF is partly characterized as a peptidic substance (2, 5), it has never been definitely identified.

Keratinocyte growth factor (KGF), otherwise designated fibroblast growth factor 7 (FGF-7), was originally purified and cloned as a mitogen with predominant activity for human keratinocytes (6). KGF, which is a 28-kDa protein, is produced by stromal mesenchyme-derived cells, including lung fibroblasts (6). KGF effects were shown on lung epithelial cell proliferation and growth (7, 8). Lately, the role of KGF during lung development was mainly studied at the morphogenesis level. Besides FGF-10, which seems to represent the major mediator in bronchial branching (9), KGF was also found to modulate branching morphogenesis in an in vitro model (10, 11). However, although the use of a KGF antibody reduced branching in this model, the branching pattern in the presence of exogenous KGF was abnormal (10, 11). Yet, we have demonstrated that KGF also acts as an enhancer of fetal type II cell maturation (12). We and others reported that KGF strongly stimulates the synthesis of all surfactant components, including DSPC (12, 13) and the various surfactant-specific proteins (12). We have shown that KGF stimulation of DSPC synthesis specifically concerns the fraction of DSPC that is incorporated in surfactant, and correlates with increased activities of choline phosphate cytidylyltransferase and fatty acid synthase (12). Recently, dexamethasone was found to enhance KGF gene expression in the cultured whole embryonic lung (14). Based on these findings, we hypothesized that KGF controls alveolar maturation and participates in mediating the so-called FPF effect.

The current study was designed to examine the relative part of KGF in the control of surfactant synthesis by alveolar type II cells. The hypothesis, that KGF-mediated stimulation of DSPC synthesis is regulated by glucocorticoids, is tested. KGF-neutralizing antibody was used to abrogate the stimulating effect of fetal lung FCM. Surfactant synthesis was monitored in isolated type II cells by measuring the rate of choline incorporation into DSPC, i.e. using the same experimental conditions that led to FPF original description. Previously, we have shown that such a rate directly reflects actual changes in DSPC accumulation (12). In addition, we examined whether glucocorticoids control KGF production from isolated lung fibroblasts.


    Materials and Methods
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Materials and Methods
 Results
 Discussion
 References
 
Fetal rat lung fibroblast and epithelial cell cultures
Virgin Wistar rats (Charles River Laboratories, Inc., St. Aubin lès Elbeuf, France) were mated one night. The following day was denoted as day zero of gestation. Pregnancy was ensured by palpation 14 days later, and rats were killed on day 20 of pregnancy (term, 22 days). Type II cells were isolated from the rat fetuses under aseptical conditions, as previously described (12). In brief, type II cells and fibroblasts were purified from enzymatically dispersed fetal lung cells by differential adhesion to plastic and low-speed centrifugation (15). Type II cells were resuspended in MEM + 10% FBS, counted, and seeded (0.5 x 106 cells/cm2) in multiwell plastic culture plates coated with Engelbreth-Holm-Swarm (EHS) basement membrane matrix prepared in the laboratory, and were allowed to adhere overnight under 95% air-5%CO2. Cells were then rinsed from serum-containing medium with MEM, and experimental media were added. Experiments were conducted in a defined medium (DM) based on DMEM (12). Culture media were purchased from Life Technologies, Inc. (Eragny, France), and additives were from Sigma (L’Isle d’Abeau-Chesnes, France). Human recombinant KGF, produced in Escherichia coli, was purchased from Pepro Tech Europe Inc. (London, UK).

Preparation of conditioned media
Fibroblasts from first-step differential adhesion (15) were grown to confluence in MEM containing 10% FBS. After rinsing twice with PBS, they were maintained for 8 h in serum-free DMEM. Then, cells were cultured in fresh serum-free DMEM for 24 h. This medium designated FCM was collected, filtered at 0.22 µm, and kept at -20 C until use.

To compare the stimulating effect of FCM prepared in these basal conditions to that of medium conditioned by fibroblasts submitted to previous glucocorticoid stimulation, other fibroblasts were exposed for 16 h to dexamethasone 10-7 M in serum-free DMEM, rinsed, and cultured in fresh DMEM to condition for 12 h. Medium conditioned by dexamethasone-treated fibroblasts is designated FCM-dex.

[3H]-choline incorporation into DSPC and determination of radiolabeled DSPC
Incorporation of tritiated choline into DSPC was evaluated from type II cells that were cultured in the presence of a 1:1 mixture, vol/vol, of FCM medium and fresh DM, i.e. FCM/DM containing 0.5 µCi/ml (18.5 kilobecquerels/ml) of [methyl 3H]-choline [80.7 Ci/mmol (3.03 terabecquerels/mmol), Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Les Ulis, France] as previously described (12). The consequence of diluting DM components by addition of another medium was checked. Cultures of cells in either fresh complete DM, or DM/DMEM (1:1), or a mixture of DM/DMEM previously conditioned by type II cells for 24 h, all led to the same level of choline incorporation into DSPC synthesis (data not shown). Thus, to assess FCM effects on type II cells, we compared choline incorporation in type II cells that were either exposed to a DM/DMEM mixture (vol/vol; designated as the control medium), or to a FCM/DM mixture.

After incorporation, radioactive medium was removed, and cells were PBS-rinsed twice. Cells were then incubated with Dispase (Sigma) 10 mg/ml in PBS at 37 C until complete digestion of the EHS matrix, and pelleted (4000 x g, 10 min). Radioactive DSPC was essentially determined directly on cell pellets. Alternatively, to specifically address the effects of dexamethasone on surfactant DSPC synthesis, surfactant material was extracted from cells before determination of DSPC radioactivity. Hence, in FCM-dex studies, DSPC was measured after surfactant extraction through a density-gradient fractionation technique adapted for cultured cells and quantitative analysis (16). Before lipid extraction, a trace amount of [14C]-dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine [113 mCi/mmol (4.2 gigabecquerels/mmol), Amersham Pharmacia Biotech] was added to cell pellets or to surfactant fractions, for determination of recovery.

Lipids were extracted by chloroform/methanol/water, 1:2:0.8 (vol/vol/vol). DSPC was further extracted from lipid extracts by the osmium tetroxide method and TLC separation on silica gel 60 chromatography plates (Merck & Co., Inc., Darmstadt, Germany) in chloroform/methanol/water, 65:25:4 (vol/vol/vol) (17). DSPC was identified by comparison with a standard run in parallel, eluted from gel by chloroform/methanol/water, 1:2:0.8 (vol/vol/vol), dried, and redissolved in chloroform/methanol, 2:1 (vol/vol), to count activities in Optiscint scintillation cocktail (EEG Instrument, Evry, France) using a double-channel dpm program.

Neutralization of KGF
Polyclonal antihuman KGF and antihuman epidermal growth factor (EGF) antibodies, produced in goats immunized with the respective human recombinant proteins, were purchased from R&D Systems Europe Ltd. (Abingdon, UK) and used for neutralization in FCM. These two antibodies were selected for their ability to neutralize the biological activities of KGF and EGF, respectively.

RNA extraction and Northern blot analysis
Total RNA was isolated from cultured fibroblasts using the TRI REAGENT kit from Euromedex (Souffel-Weyersheim, France). Twenty micrograms of RNA were fractionated by electrophoresis through 1% agarose, 2.2 M formaldehyde gels, and blotted onto nylon membranes (Gene Screen, NEN Life Science Products, Boston, MA). The KGF probe was amplified by RT-PCR from RNA extracted from adult rat lung. The primers used were: sense, 5'ATC CTG CCG ACT CCG CTC TAC-3'; antisense, 5'-CCC TCC GCT GTG TGT CCA TTT A-3', encoding a 459-bp fragment between positions 132 and 590 of rat KGF complementary DNA (11). Probes were radiolabeled with [{alpha}-32P] deoxycytidine triphosphate (ICN Biomedicals, Inc., Irvine, CA) using a Rediprime DNA labeling system from Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, and purified on NucTrap probe purification columns (Stratagene, Cambridge, UK). Prehybridization with salmon sperm DNA was performed for 3 h, and hybridization was carried out overnight at 42 C. To allow correction for variations in loaded amounts of RNA, blots were stripped and hybridized with an 18S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) probe. Autoradiographs were made by exposing blots at -80 C to x-ray film (Reflection, NEN Life Science Products). Quantification of signal intensity was performed by densitometric analysis of autoradiograms using the NIH Image analysis program.

Statistical analysis
All data were obtained from a minimum of three different experiments and are presented as mean ± SEM. Statistical analyses were performed using ANOVA (Fisher\\'s PLSD) or, when applicable, using Student’s t test for unpaired values. In both instances, a P value < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.


    Results
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Materials and Methods
 Results
 Discussion
 References
 
Neutralizing exogenous KGF in fetal type II cells by the use of anti-KGF antibody
Accumulation of surfactant phospholipids in rat type II cells takes place between gestational day 19 and term (22 days) (1). To examine phospholipid synthesis in these cells, we used lungs of 20-day-old rat fetuses, i.e. at the developmental stage that immediately precedes the phase of maximum surfactant accumulation (1) and at which exogenous KGF effects on DSPC synthesis are evidenced (12). We measured [3H]-choline incorporation into DSPC from type II cells cultured for 48 h in DM alone. Time-response of DSPC synthesis was assessed, and it showed linear increase of [3H]-choline incorporation for the first 24 h of culture, followed by a slightly reduced increase rate for the next 24 h (data not shown). Before testing its effects on FCM, effects of the goat KGF-neutralizing antibody were evaluated in DM alone with or without human recombinant KGF, noted rh-KGF, to ensure antibody specificity (data presented in Table 1Go). Addition of the antibody to DM alone did not change incorporation, showing its inocuity for this pathway (Table 1Go). Consistent with previous findings (12), a stimulating effect of rh-KGF on DSPC synthesis was observed (Table 1Go). Sufficient concentration of the antibody to abolish stimulating effects of rh-KGF was chosen at 5 µg/ml, after testing various concentrations ranging from 0–20 µg/ml (Table 1Go, and data not shown).


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Table 1. Neutralization of recombinant KGF by anti-KGF antibody

 
Effect of FCM after neutralizing endogenous KGF activity
The stimulating effect of FCM on DSPC synthesis in fetal rat type II cells is presented in Fig. 1Go. On the average, choline incorporation in DSPC was increased by 52.8% in type II cells exposed to FCM, compared with control medium (Fig. 1Go). Addition of the KGF-neutralizing antibody to suppress KGF endogenous activity from the FCM led to suppress about half of the FCM-stimulating effect on the incorporation of tritiated choline, which was this time increased by 25.2%, compared with control medium (Fig. 1Go). Raising antibody concentration to 10 µg/ml did not lead to further reduction of the FCM-stimulating effect (not shown). Moreover, we tested the possible effect of another growth factor, EGF, which is known to be produced in the developing lung mesenchyme (18). The use of a goat anti-EGF antibody, used at a final concentration of 10 µg/ml, showed no effect on the stimulating activity of FCM (Fig. 1Go). This result indicates the absence of any nonspecific influence of added goat IgGs on choline incorporation and suggests the specific relevance of KGF among other mesenchymal-produced factors on surfactant phospholipid synthesis. From these results, we conclude that about half of the stimulating effect of FCM can be accounted for by KGF activity.



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Figure 1. Effects of FCM and of KGF-neutralizing antibody on [3H]-choline incorporation into type II cell DSPC in 48 h. Control medium is shown as an open bar and consisted of a vol/vol mixture of DMEM and DM (see detailed composition in Material and Methods). FCM is represented as a black bar and was prepared from DMEM conditioned by confluent fibroblasts for 24 h, and mixed vol/vol with DM. Anti-KGF antibody was added to FCM at 5 µg/ml and is represented as a shaded bar. Anti-EGF antibody was added at 10 µg/ml to FCM and is shown as a hatched bar. Bars represent the mean ± SEM (n = 20). Multiple comparison was performed by ANOVA and is shown as letters: a, significant difference with control medium for P < 0.001; b, significant difference with control medium for P < 0.01; c, significant difference with FCM for P < 0.001.

 
Regulation of KGF gene expression by dexamethasone in fetal lung fibroblasts
To investigate KGF implication in the so-called FPF activity, we then examined dexamethasone influence on KGF expression. We first determined the steady-state level of KGF messenger RNA (mRNA) in rat fetal lung fibroblasts after an 8-h, 12-h, 16-h, or 24-h treatment by dexamethasone (10-7 M). No significant change was found at times 8 h and 12 h, but an increase of about 35% and 50% was observed at times 16 h and 24 h, respectively (Fig. 2Go). Then, dose response of dexamethasone was thus assessed at 24 h and revealed no stimulating effect of a 10-9 M and 10-8 M concentration, whereas 10-7 M and 10-6 M dexamethasone led to, respectively, 50 and 60% of stimulation of KGF mRNA (Fig. 3Go).



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Figure 2. Effects of an 8- to 24-h exposure to dexamethasone (10-7 M) on KGF gene expression in fetal rat lung fibroblasts. Upper panel, Representative Northern blot (C, control fibroblasts; D, dexamethasone-treated fibroblasts; KGF, KGF mRNA; 18S, 18S rRNA). Lower panel, Semiquantitative determination after normalization for loading by 18S rRNA. The percent of control represents the densitometric values of the signals (using the NIH Image analysis program) from the dexamethasone-treated samples vs. their corresponding controls. Bars, Mean ± SEM on 9 determinations. Significant difference with respective control value (t test): *, P < 0.05; ***, P < 0.001.

 


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Figure 3. Effects of a 10-9- to 10-6-M dexamethasone exposure on KGF gene expression in fetal rat lung fibroblasts. Upper panel, Representative Northern blot (C, control fibroblasts, fibroblasts treated by dexamethasone at 10-9, 10-8, 10-7, 10-6 M; KGF, KGF mRNA; 18S, 18S rRNA). Lower panel, Semiquantitative representation after normalization for loading by 18S rRNA. The percent of control represents the densitometric values of the signals (using the NIH Image analysis program) from the dexamethasone-treated samples vs. their corresponding controls. Bars, Mean ± SEM on four determinations. Significant difference with respective control value (t test): *, P < 0.05; **, P < 0.01; ***, P < 0.001.

 
Effect of KGF-neutralizing antibody on dexamethasone-treated FCM-stimulating activity
Medium conditioned from dexamethasone-treated fibroblasts (FCM-dex) was prepared from fibroblasts with prior exposure to dexamethasone (10-7 M) for 16 h. To specifically address the effects of dexamethasone, incorporation of choline was measured in DSPC of the surfactant fraction isolated from type II cells exposed to either FCM or FCM-dex. As shown in Fig. 4Go, FCM-dex further enhanced choline incorporation into surfactant DSPC by 38%, compared with FCM alone. To evaluate KGF implication in mediating the dexamethasone effect, anti-KGF antibody was added to FCM-dex. Importantly, addition of anti-KGF neutralizing antibody totally suppressed the effect of dexamethasone treatment (Fig. 4Go).



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Figure 4. Effects of medium conditioned by dexamethasone-treated fibroblasts and neutralization of KGF in the medium. Changes induced by dexamethasone and anti-KGF antibody (at 5 µg/ml) are expressed as percentage of incorporation level in FCM prepared in the absence of dexamethasone (FCM, black bar). Incorporation of tritiated choline into type II cell DSPC on 48 h was measured in DSPC of the surfactant fraction isolated from type II cells. Dexamethasone-treated FCM was prepared by a prior exposure of fibroblasts to dexamethasone (10-7 M) for 16 h (FCM-dex, hatched bar). Anti-KGF antibody was added at 5 µg/ml to FCM-dex and is represented as a shaded bar. Bars, Mean ± SEM (n = 6). Multiple comparisons by ANOVA are shown as letters: a, significant difference with FCM for P < 0.01; b, significant difference with FCM-dex for P < 0.001.

 

    Discussion
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Materials and Methods
 Results
 Discussion
 References
 
Fetal lung development proceeds through fibroblast-epithelial cell communications, which are influenced by a number of hormones and growth factors. During late gestation, this process leads, in turn, to augmented surfactant synthesis. A stimulating effect of fetal lung fibroblasts on surfactant phospholipid synthesis has been known for some time (2). We recently reported that KGF is a stimulus of surfactant protein and phospholipid synthesis, particularly for the major surfactant component, DSPC, in fetal alveolar type II cells (12). Through simultaneous measures of DNA synthesis (to assess cell proliferation) and choline incorporation (to assess DSPC synthesis), we have shown that KGF increased DSPC synthesis independently from its mitogenic effect (12). The stimulation of DSPC synthesis seems to result from enhanced activity of both choline phosphate cytidylyltransferase (the rate-limiting enzyme of the CDP-choline pathway) and fatty acid synthase (a key enzyme of lipogenesis, which provides the lipid precursors for phospholipid synthesis) (12).

In an effort to define the contribution of fibroblasts to the stimulation of phospholipid surfactant synthesis from type II cells and, in the light of our findings presenting KGF as a stimulating factor, we chose to impair KGF function ex vivo through the use of a neutralizing antibody. This approach allowed us to evaluate, to about 50%, the relative part of KGF in the stimulating activity of medium conditioned by fetal lung fibroblasts in the absence of any stimulus. The possibility that neutralization was partial and that the actual part of KGF was therefore underestimated seems unlikely. Indeed, we found that the same antibody concentration was sufficient to totally inhibit the effect of exogenous rh-KGF (10 ng/ml). Because such concentration was found to actively increase choline incorporation at a higher level than the one obtained with FCM (see Results and 12), this finding argues for an efficient inhibition of the KGF present in FCM. It is highly likely that the antibody was equally potent in neutralizing the activity of rat KGF present in FCM as that of rh-KGF, because rat and human KGFs are highly conserved [91% ungapped amino acid identity (19, 20)] and because rh-KGF displays biological activity in the rat (7, 8, 12, 21), which indicates close 3-dimensional structure.

Fibroblast-pneumonocyte factor was defined as a lung mesenchymal cell product, (2) presumably of peptidic nature (2, 5), that stimulates surfactant phosphatidylcholine production in activating choline phosphate cytidylyltransferase activity (22) through paracrine effect on the alveolar type II cell (2, 22). FPF production was proposed to be stage-specific and induced by glucocorticoids (2) at a pretranslational level (23). Though the mediating substance(s) has (have) yet to be identified, data reported herein strongly argue for an important role of KGF and suggest its involvement in mediating the FPF effect. Indeed, in the current study, the most significant observation is the ability of an anti-KGF neutralizing antibody to reproducibly suppress about half of the stimulation of DSPC synthesis observed when type II cells are exposed to FCM, and to completely abolish the further enhancement of DSPC synthesis observed after previous exposure of fibroblasts to dexamethasone treatment. In addition, we previously reported KGF-induced stimulation of choline phosphate cytidylyltransferase activity in isolated type II cells (12). Also, our present findings reveal that KGF expression is enhanced at the pretranslational level in fibroblasts treated by dexamethasone, using the same experimental conditions as the ones that led to evidence the effect of FPF. Previously, KGF expression was shown to be stimulated by glucocorticoids, though at a much earlier stage of development and in a whole-lung explant culture model (14). At last, KGF expression is regulated in the course of development and shows a marked increase in the fetal rat lung between gestational days 18 and 20 (11), i.e. at the time when surfactant starts accumulating. Altogether, these data suggest that KGF is responsible for most effects attributed to the FPF. However, because mice homozygous for the KGF null-mutation present no obvious respiratory failure (24) and our results impairing KGF reveal some remaining stimulating activity, we propose that the FPF effect is mediated through a combination of factors. Among these factors, the drastic consequences of impairing KGF from the FCM reveals that KGF plays a major contribution. Simultaneous action of other growth factors is likely to account for some redundancy and/or compensation explaining the absence of lung phenotype in the KGF null-mutation.

Although lung epithelial development is delayed in mice lacking EGFR (25), our findings with anti-EGF antibody argue against a role of EGF. Instead, transforming-growth factor (TGF){alpha}, which is produced by interstitial lung tissue (26, 27) and exerts its activity through the same receptor, is likely to be involved. Another mediator, namely TGFß3, could have been a good candidate because: 1) it was up-regulated by corticosteroid in fetal lung fibroblasts (28); and 2) its inactivation, in mice, by gene targeting led to delayed lung maturation (29). However, the observation that such mutation did not suppress the corticosteroid-promoted maturation (30) stands sufficient to question the contribution of TGFß3 to FPF. Other members of the FGF family, such as FGF-1 or FGF-10, are also very likely to be involved. Among FGFs, FGF-10 is the most closely related to KGF (47% of amino acid identity in human), and both factors bind the same receptor FGF-R2 IIIb with high affinity (31). The earlier onset of FGF-10 expression, as compared with KGF, in the course of embryonic lung development (9, 10, 11), however, argues for different functions of these factors and for an implication of KGF in later developmental events such as alveolar cell maturation. Whereas FGF-10 is sufficient to elicit branching in the isolated, mesenchyme-free embryonic lung epithelium (9, 32), KGF elicits an abnormal cystic-like growth in this model, as well as in the isolated whole lung (9, 11, 32). Moreover, FGF-10 gene targeting in the mouse totally prevents lung organogenesis (33), which is, by contrast, normal in the presence of KGF null-mutation (24). Thus, despite their similarities, their differential effects on lung morphogenesis demonstrate that these factors have distinct roles in lung development. As for FGF-1, the simultaneous presence of both KGF and FGF-1 in a complex medium has been found to be necessary for eliciting the expression of the alveolar type II cell phenotype from cultured embryonic tracheal epithelial cells in mesenchyme-free culture (34). FGF-1 has also been reported to enhance surfactant protein expression in isolated adult rat type II cells, although to a lesser extent than KGF (21). As a whole, although the implication of FGF-10 in the control of surfactant synthesis cannot be ruled out, a predominant role of KGF in this process seems therefore likely, probably in association with FGF-1. Having clearly defined the conditions of stimulation by the FCM herein, implication of these various candidates, discussed here, to mediate the FPF effect, is worth testing in future studies.

In conclusion, the present results bring new insights into the nature of diffusible mediators from mesenchyme that control surfactant synthesis and reveal the importance of KGF among these factors. Importantly, the current study also establishes that glucocorticoid maturational effects on fetal lung are mediated, at least in part, through the production of KGF by lung mesenchymal cells.

Received March 1, 2000.


    References
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Materials and Methods
 Results
 Discussion
 References
 

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