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* From the Departments of Medicine and Cell Biology, Washington University School of Medicine at Barnes-Jewish Hospital, St. Louis, MO.
Correspondence to: William Hartzell, MD, Pulmonary and Critical Care, Washington University, 216 S Kingshighway Blvd, St. Louis, MO 63110
Lung injury after bone marrow transplant (BMT) is a major cause of morbidity and mortality limiting the benefits of this procedure. One type of lung injury, idiopathic pneumonia syndrome, has been found to contain abundant expression of a macrophage-derived metalloproteinase, macrophage elastase (ME), in human lung biopsy specimens. To determine the role of ME in post-BMT lung injury, we developed a murine BMT model using wild-type (MME+/+) and mice deficient in ME (MME-/-), generated by gene targeting. Allogeneic single major histocompatibility complex mismatched BMTs were performed to replicate conditions that lead to lung injury.
Groups of wild-type (MME+/+) and MME-/- mice in a pure 129/Sv
(H2Kb) background underwent total body irradiation (10 Gy
in a single fraction), followed by BMT extracted from
(H2Kd) NOD mice injected via tail vein. Initially groups of
six MME+/+ and MME-/- mice were monitored for survival. Presently,
all MME+/+ have lived for > 2 months while five of six MME-/- mice
developed apparent respiratory distress and died by 2 weeks. Similar
results were found using the bone marrow from B6.C-H2bm12 mice that
have mutation at the IAb site of the H-2 complex. Mice were
subjected to BMT as above and killed at day 7 to 14 for assessment of
pathologic changes and bone marrow engraftment. Hematologic indexes
were comparable in both MME+/+ and MME-/- mice for that stage of bone
marrow engraftment, demonstrating that marrow engraftment was not a
significant factor in early mortality. Lung histology of MME-/- mice
revealed alveolar hemorrhage in four of six mice along with areas of
mononuclear cell infiltrates and necrosis, while wild-type mice had no
significant lung pathologic findings. Necrosis was also observed in the
gut, liver, and kidneys in several MME-/- mice. Bacterial stains of
these organs from MME-/- mice revealed the presence of Gram-positive
cocci in areas of tissue necrosis. Tissue cultures have subsequently
grown Gemella morbillorum, an
-hemolytic streptococcus.
No bacterial infections in the lungs from wild-type mice have been
observed by culture or by bacterial staining.
In summary, in the absence of ME, mice subjected to radiation therapy followed by allogeneic mismatched BMT are prone to pulmonary hemorrhage, tissue necrosis, and bacterial infection. We surprisingly conclude that ME appears to play a role in host defense crucial during times of neutropenia. We are currently investigating the novel bactericidal properties of ME.
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