Effect of cortisol on human fetal lung in organ culture

Abstract
Human fetal lung tissue obtained during the second trimester was cultured as organ culture with or without cortisol. The effect of cortisol on the phospholipid metabolism, as related to the appearance of osmiophilic lamellar bodies and the localisation of newly incorporated choline, was studied. In cortisol-treated expiants, the concentration of saturated lecithins and the incorporation of (Me-3H)-choline into saturated lecithins increases significantly concomitantly with an increased number of osmiophilic lamellar bodies. The labelled choline is predominantly associated with these bodies. The obtained results indicate that cortisol accelerates the synthesis of pulmonary surfactant in the human fetal lung as early as in the second trimester.