| Literature DB >> 11667972 |
Abstract
Surfactant protein-D (SP-D) participates in the innate response to inhaled microorganisms and organic antigens, and contributes to immune and inflammatory regulation within the lung. SP-D is synthesized and secreted by alveolar and bronchiolar epithelial cells, but is also expressed by epithelial cells lining various exocrine ducts and the mucosa of the gastrointestinal and genitourinary tracts. SP-D, a collagenous calcium-dependent lectin (or collectin), binds to surface glycoconjugates expressed by a wide variety of microorganisms, and to oligosaccharides associated with the surface of various complex organic antigens. SP-D also specifically interacts with glycoconjugates and other molecules expressed on the surface of macrophages, neutrophils, and lymphocytes. In addition, SP-D binds to specific surfactant-associated lipids and can influence the organization of lipid mixtures containing phosphatidylinositol in vitro. Consistent with these diverse in vitro activities is the observation that SP-D-deficient transgenic mice show abnormal accumulations of surfactant lipids, and respond abnormally to challenge with respiratory viruses and bacterial lipopolysaccharides. The phenotype of macrophages isolated from the lungs of SP-D-deficient mice is altered, and there is circumstantial evidence that abnormal oxidant metabolism and/or increased metalloproteinase expression contributes to the development of emphysema. The expression of SP-D is increased in response to many forms of lung injury, and deficient accumulation of appropriately oligomerized SP-D might contribute to the pathogenesis of a variety of human lung diseases.Entities:
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Year: 2000 PMID: 11667972 PMCID: PMC59549 DOI: 10.1186/rr19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Respir Res ISSN: 1465-9921
Known and potential sites of SP-D expression
| Anatomical site | Organ | Cellular source |
| Respiratory tract/oropharynx/nasopharynx | Lung | Alveolar type II cell, non-ciliated bronchiolar cells |
| Trachea and bronchi | Submucosal glands and repiratory epithelial cells | |
| Lacrimal glands | Ductal epithelial cells | |
| Salivary gland | Ductal epithelial cells | |
| Eustachian tube | Squamous epithelium | |
| Gastrointestinal tract | Esophagus | Squamous epithelium |
| Stomach | Glandular epithelial cells | |
| Small intestine | Mucosal epithelial cells | |
| Pancreas (exocrine) | Ductal epithelial cells (and islets) | |
| Biliary tract | Intrahepatic ductal epithelial cells | |
| Genitourinary tract | Prostate | Glandular epithelium |
| Bladder | Transitional epithelium | |
| Kidney | Collecting duct epithelium | |
| Uterus | Endometrium/endocervical epithelium? | |
| Fetal membranes | ? | |
| Skin and soft tissue | Cutaneous squamous epithelium | Squamous epithelium |
| Sweat glands | Ductal epithelium | |
| Sebaceous glands | Glandular epithelium | |
| Breast | Mammary epithelium | |
| Mesentery | ? | |
| Other | Heart | ? |
| Brain | ? | |
| Testis | Leydig cells | |
| Pancreas (endocrine) | Islets | |
| Placenta | ? |
Figure 1Molecular structure of SP-D. (a) Schematic diagram illustrating the structure of SP-D dodecamers, which consist of four trimeric subunits, and SP-D trimers. (b) Quick-freeze deep-etch image of human SP-D dodecamers, SP-D multimers, and the SP-D binding protein gp-340 (kindly provided by John Heuser, Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, Missouri, USA).
Interactions of SP-D with bacterial glycoconjugates
| Group | Organism | Glycoconjugates(s) | References |
| Gram-negative bacteria | LPS core (cap-) | [ | |
| LPS? | [ | ||
| LPS core | [ | ||
| Gram-positive bacteria | Not defined | [ | |
| Not defined | [ | ||
| Other | Lipoarabinomannan | [ |
Potential modulation of SP-D function
| Altered patterns of oligomerization |
| Liberation of trimeric subunits secondary to proteolytic degradation |
| Self-aggregation |
| Modifications of the CRD |
| Proteolytic degradation |
| Oxidative modification |
| Local pH and calcium concentration |
| Competing ligands |
| LPS |
| Microorganisms |
| Host lectins with overlapping specificity |
| Mannose receptor |
| Other collectins (SP-A, mannose-binding lectin) |
| Non C-type lectins (such as ficolins) |
Potential alterations in human disease
| Disease | Abnormality | References |
| Cystic fibrosis | Decreased accumulation or | [ |
| depletion | ||
| Acute interstitial | Decreased accumulation or | [ |
| pneumonias (ARDS) | depletion | |
| Cigarette smoking | Decreased levels in lavage | [ |
| Bronchopulmonary | Decreased accumulation or | [ |
| dysplasia | depletion | |
| Asthma | Altered activity | [ |
| Alveolar proteinosis. | Increased accumulation | [ |
| Diabetes mellitus | Decreased activity? | [ |
Increased SP-D accumulation or expression in animal models
| Injury or challenge | Species | Reference |
| Silicosis | Rat | [ |
| Hyperoxia | Rat | [ |
| Endotoxin (LPS) | Rat | [ |
| Challenge with | Mouse | [ |
| Challenge with IAV | Mouse | [ |
| Challenge with | SCID mouse | [ |
| Rat | [ | |
| Overexpression of interleukin-4 | Mouse | [ |
SCID, severe combined immunodeficiency.
Potential functional roles suggested by published studies in vitro and in vivo
| Anti-inflammatory |
| Regulation of inflammatory response to microorganisms and |
| microbial products |
| `Neutralization' of LPS/altered presentation of LPS to host cells |
| Regulation of pulmonary oxidant metabolism |
| Antimicrobial |
| Enhanced opsonization and killing of some organisms |
| Decreased internalization of some intracellular pathogens |
| Enhanced microbial agglutination with enhanced physical or |
| cellular clearance |
| Enhanced inflammatory response to SP-D/microbial complexes |
| Altered microbial growth |
| Immunomodulatory |
| Decreased proliferative response of lymphocytes to various |
| mitogens |
| Altered presentation of antigens to specifically sensitized cells |
| Proinflammatory/repair |
| Enhanced directed migration or airspace retention of phagocytes |
| Altered macrophage production of metalloproteinases |
| Surfactant homeostasis |
| Altered spatial organization of PI-enriched sub-fractions of |
| surfactant lipid |
| Normal cellular uptake and metabolism of surfactant lipid |