Surfactant protein-A-deficient mice display an exaggerated early inflammatory response to a beta-resistant strain of influenza A virus AMERICAN JOURNAL OF RESPIRATORY CELL AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY Li, G., Siddiqui, J., Hendry, M., Akiyama, J., Edmondson, J., Brown, C., Allen, L., Levitt, S., Poulain, F., Hawgood, S. 2002; 26 (3): 277-282

Abstract

Surfactant protein (SP)-A is a member of the collectin family of proteins. In vitro, SP-A binds influenza A virus (IAV), neutralizes infectivity, and enhances uptake by macrophages. SP-D also binds and neutralizes certain strains of IAV. To determine if SP-A has a role in protecting the intact animal against IAV infection, we inoculated gene-targeted SP-A-deficient mice (-/-) and littermate controls (+/+) with either saline or increasing doses of an IAV strain that binds SP-A but not SP-D. IAV was more virulent in SP-A-/- compared with +/+ mice, with a significantly lower mean lethal dose (LD(50)) and significantly greater weight loss during infection. SP-A-/- mice also had increased airway epithelial injury and more alveolar cellular infiltrates than +/+ mice. On Day 2, SP-A-/- mice had more neutrophils and higher MIP-2 levels in the lung than +/+ mice. We conclude the altered host response and increased susceptibility to X-79Delta167 infection in SP-A-/- mice reflects a protective role for SP-A in regulating the host response to IAV. Because the recovery of virus from lung homogenates on Days 2 and 6 after inoculation was comparable in -/- and +/+ mice, we speculate SP-A reduces IAV virulence independently of direct viral neutralization.

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View details for PubMedID 11867335