Aquaporin water channels and lung physiology
Open Access
- 1 May 2000
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Physiological Society in American Journal of Physiology-Lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology
- Vol. 278 (5), L867-L879
- https://doi.org/10.1152/ajplung.2000.278.5.l867
Abstract
Fluid transport across epithelial and endothelial barriers occurs in the neonatal and adult lungs. Biophysical measurements in the intact lung and cell isolates have indicated that osmotic water permeability is exceptionally high across alveolar epithelia and endothelia and moderately high across airway epithelia. This review is focused on the role of membrane water-transporting proteins, the aquaporins (AQPs), in high lung water permeability and lung physiology. The lung expresses several AQPs: AQP1 in microvascular endothelia, AQP3 in large airways, AQP4 in large- and small-airway epithelia, and AQP5 in type I alveolar epithelial cells. Lung phenotype analysis of transgenic mice lacking each of these AQPs has been informative. Osmotically driven water permeability between the air space and capillary compartments is reduced ∼10-fold by deletion of AQP1 or AQP5 and reduced even more by deletion of AQP1 and AQP4 or AQP1 and AQP5 together. AQP1 deletion greatly reduces osmotically driven water transport across alveolar capillaries but has only a minor effect on hydrostatic lung filtration, which primarily involves paracellular water movement. However, despite the major role of AQPs in lung osmotic water permeabilities, AQP deletion has little or no effect on physiologically important lung functions, such as alveolar fluid clearance in adult and neonatal lung, and edema accumulation after lung injury. Although AQPs play a major role in renal and central nervous system physiology, the data to date on AQP knockout mice do not support an important role of high lung water permeabilities or AQPs in lung physiology. However, there remain unresolved questions about possible non-water-transporting roles of AQPs and about the role of AQPs in airway physiology, pleural fluid dynamics, and edema after lung infection.Keywords
This publication has 79 references indexed in Scilit:
- Progress on the Structure and Function of Aquaporin 1Journal of Structural Biology, 1998
- Epithelial aquaporinsCurrent Opinion in Cell Biology, 1998
- Severely Impaired Urinary Concentrating Ability in Transgenic Mice Lacking Aquaporin-1 Water ChannelsJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1998
- Developmental changes in water permeability across the alveolar barrier in perinatal rabbit lung.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1997
- Forskolin Stimulation of Water and Cation Permeability in Aquaporin1 Water ChannelsScience, 1996
- A water channel closely related to rat brain aquaporin 4 is expressed in acid‐ and pepsinogen‐secretory cells of human stomachFEBS Letters, 1996
- Transepithelial water permeability in microperfused distal airways. Evidence for channel-mediated water transport.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1996
- Selective response of human airway epithelia to luminal but not serosal solution hypertonicity. Possible role for proximal airway epithelia as an osmolality transducer.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1994
- The MIP Family of Integral Membrane Channel Proteins: Sequence Comparisons, Evolutionary Relationships, Reconstructed Pathway of Evolution, and Proposed Functional Differentiation of the Two Repeated Halves of the ProteinsCritical Reviews in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, 1993
- Reconstitution of functional water channels in liposomes containing purified red cell CHIP28 proteinBiochemistry, 1992