PULMONARY SURFACTANT LIPIDS IN THE FAVEOLAR AND SACCULAR LUNG REGIONSOF SNAKES

Citation
Cb. Daniels et al., PULMONARY SURFACTANT LIPIDS IN THE FAVEOLAR AND SACCULAR LUNG REGIONSOF SNAKES, Physiological zoology, 68(5), 1995, pp. 812-830
Citations number
39
Categorie Soggetti
Zoology,Physiology
Journal title
ISSN journal
0031935X
Volume
68
Issue
5
Year of publication
1995
Pages
812 - 830
Database
ISI
SICI code
0031-935X(1995)68:5<812:PSLITF>2.0.ZU;2-Y
Abstract
We examined the composition and function of pulmonary surfactant locat ed within the faveolar and saccular regions of the garter snake Thamno phis ordinoides and the rattlesnake Crotalus atrox lung While the fave olar region is well vascularized and septated and is used in gas excha nge, the saccular lung is a thin-walled smooth bag with very little va scularization that functions as a bellows and in gas storage. Both reg ions of the lungs of the two snake species contained large amounts of surfactant The rattlesnake faveolar lung contained 2419.9+/-260.0 mu g of phospholipid per gram of wet lung mass, a value among the largest ever recorded for any species. However, snake faveolar lung surfactant is markedly different from all other vertebrate surfactants reported to date because it contains relatively little cholesterol (3%-8%). Fav eolar lung surfactant of the rattlesnake had a greater phospholipid sa turation level than that of the garter snake. The phospholipid profile of garter snake faveolar lung surfactant was very similar to that rep orted for most other nonmammalian vertebrates, with phospha tidylcholi ne (PC) the predominant phospholipid (64%), phosphatidylglycerol (PG), phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), and sphingomyelin (S) either absent or present only in brace amounts (1%-4%), and intermediate (17%) levels of phosphatidylinositol (PI). The phospholipid profile of rattlesnake faveolar lung surfactant, on the other hand differed greatly from that of most other vertebrates in that it contained unusually high levels of lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC) and S (12%-18%), whereas PG and PI we re virtually absent (0%-1.4%). Removal of surfactant by lavage increas ed the opening pressure (the initial pressure required to commence the inflation of a collapsed lung) of both regions of the garter snake lu ng (faveolar region 1.32-4.51 cm H2O; saccular region, 1.55-2.19 cm H2 O). However the rattlesnake faveolar region did not collapse even afte r lavage, and an opening pressure was never obtained The opening press ure for the rattlesnake saccular lungs (2.78 cm H2O) was not increased by lavage (3.0 cm H2O). The filling pressures were greater for the fa veolar lung than for the saccular lung for both species. Filling press ure of the two lung regions was not affected by lavage in either snake .