细胞外基质
弹性蛋白
气道
医学
哮喘
多糖
成纤维细胞
病理
纤维
细胞生物学
体外
免疫学
生物物理学
化学
生物化学
生物
蛋白多糖
外科
作者
Leila B. Mostaço-Guidolin,Emmanuel T. Osei,Jari Ullah,Soheil Hajimohammadi,M. Fouadi,Xian Li,Vicky Li,Furquan Shaheen,Chen Yang,Fanny Chu,Darren J. Cole,Corry‐Anke Brandsma,Irene H. Heijink,Geoffrey N. Maksym,David C. Walker,Tillie‐Louise Hackett
标识
DOI:10.1164/rccm.201810-1855oc
摘要
Rationale: Histologic stains have been used as the gold standard to visualize extracellular matrix (ECM) changes associated with airway remodeling in asthma, yet they provide no information on the biochemical and structural characteristics of the ECM, which are vital to understanding alterations in tissue function.Objectives: To demonstrate the use of nonlinear optical microscopy (NLOM) and texture analysis algorithms to image fibrillar collagen (second harmonic generation) and elastin (two-photon excited autofluorescence), to obtain biochemical and structural information on the remodeled ECM environment in asthma.Methods: Nontransplantable donor lungs from donors with asthma (n = 13) and control (n = 12) donors were used for the assessment of airway collagen and elastin fibers by NLOM, and extraction of lung fibroblasts for in vitro experiments.Measurements and Main Results: Fibrillar collagen is not only increased but also highly disorganized and fragmented within large and small asthmatic airways compared with control subjects, using NLOM imaging. Furthermore, such structural alterations are present in pediatric and adult donors with asthma, irrespective of fatal disease. In vitro studies demonstrated that asthmatic airway fibroblasts are deficient in their packaging of fibrillar collagen-I and express less decorin, important for collagen fibril packaging. Packaging of collagen fibrils was found to be more disorganized in asthmatic airways compared with control subjects, using transmission electron microscopy.Conclusions: NLOM imaging enabled the structural assessment of the ECM, and the data suggest that airway remodeling in asthma involves the progressive accumulation of disorganized fibrillar collagen by airway fibroblasts. This study highlights the future potential clinical application of NLOM to assess airway remodeling in vivo.
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