Toxicology and applied pharmacology
-
Toxicol. Appl. Pharmacol. · Sep 1999
Increased serum and urinary concentrations of lung clara cell protein in rats acutely exposed to ozone.
Clara cell protein (CC16) is a 16-17-kDa protein secreted by Clara cells in the bronchial lining fluid of the lung from which it passively diffuses into serum before being eliminated by the kidneys. The concentration of CC16 in serum has recently been proposed as a peripheral marker of the integrity of Clara cells and/or of the bronchoalveolar/blood barrier. To evaluate the sensitivity of this new lung marker to acute epithelial damage induced by ozone (O(3)), CC16 was determined in the serum of rats after a single 3-h exposure to 0.3, 0.6, or 1 ppm O(3). ⋯ This effect was most likely responsible for the concomitant marked reduction of CC16 concentrations in BALF and lung homogenate, since the CC16 mRNA levels in the lungs were unchanged and the absolute amounts of CC16 leaking into serum or lost from the respiratory tract were similar. These changes were paralleled by an elevation of the urinary excretion of CC16 resulting from an overloading of the tubular reabsorption process. These results demonstrate that the assay of CC16 in serum and even in urine represents a new noninvasive test to detect the increased lung epithelial permeability induced by O(3).