Silica-Exposed Lung Fluids Have a Proliferative Activity for Type II Epithelial Cells: A Study on Human and Sheep Alveolar Fluids

1992 
The type II pneumocyte changes in silicosis are characterized by hyperplasic and hypertrophic epithelial cells, and increased surfactant phospholipids in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluids (BALF). To assess the proliferative activity of alveolar lining fluids, BALF were applied on type II cell cultures. The growth-promoting activity was studied by tritiated thymidine incorporation for 24 h, and the cell number was measured by an electronic counting after a 48-h exposure time. Human BALF from 3 subsets of workers exposed to silica, staged according to ILO classification (silica exposed-workers without disease: hSWD n = 6; workers with simple silicosis: hSS n = 7; workers with confluent silicosis: hCS n = 5), were compared to healthy volunteers (hC n = 6). Sheep BALF from our model of silicosis and control animals (sS and sC) were studied at months 0, 6, and 24 of exposure. A clear enhancement was found in type II cell DNA synthesis under the effect of either normal and silicotic human or sheep BALF, in comp...
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