Modern pathology : an official journal of the United States and Canadian Academy of Pathology, Inc
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Pulmonary surfactant is essential to maintain alveolar patency, and invariably fatal neonatal lung disease has been recognized to involve mutations in the genes encoding surfactant protein-B or ATP-binding cassette transporter family member ABCA3. The lipid transporter ABCA3 targets surfactant phospholipids to lamellar bodies that are lysosomal-derived organelles of alveolar type II cells. ABCA3-/- mice have grossly reduced surfactant phosphatidyl glycerol levels and die of respiratory failure soon after birth. ⋯ In conclusion, our findings underscore that the implications of interstitial lung disease in infant lungs differ from those in adults. In infants with a desquamative interstitial pneumonitis pattern, surfactant or ABCA3 mutations should be evaluated. Importantly, these findings support the notion that electron microscopy is useful in distinguishing between surfactant protein-B and ABCA3 deficiency, and has an important role in evaluating biopsies or autopsies of term infants with unexplained severe respiratory failure and interstitial lung disease.