Lamellar Bodies Form Solid Three-dimensional Films at the Respiratory Air-Liquid Interface

Ravasio, Andrea; Olmeda, Barbara; Bertocchi, Cristina; Haller, Thomas; Perez-Gil, Jesus

Abstract

Pulmonary surfactant is essential for lung function. It is assembled, stored and secreted as particulate entities (lamellar body-like particles; LBPs). LBPs disintegrate when they contact an air-liquid interface, leading to an instantaneous spreading of material and a decline in surface tension. Here, we demonstrate that the film formed by the adsorbed material spontaneously segregate into distinct ordered and disordered lipid phase regions under unprecedented near-physiological conditions and, unlike natural surfactant purified from bronchoalveolar lavages, dynamically reorganized into highly viscous multilayer domains with complex three-dimensional topographies. Multilayer domains, in coexistence with liquid phases, showed a progressive stiffening and finally solidification, probably driven by a self-driven disassembly of LBPs from a sub-surface compartment. We conclude that surface film formation from LBPs is a highly dynamic and complex process, leading to a more elaborated scenario than that observed and predicted by models using reconstituted, lavaged, or fractionated preparations.

Más información

Título según WOS: ID WOS:000281404100060 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volumen: 285
Número: 36
Editorial: Elsevier
Fecha de publicación: 2010
Página de inicio: 28174
Página final: 28182
DOI:

10.1074/jbc.M110.106518

Notas: ISI