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Comparative biochemistry of gestational and postnatal lung growth and development in the rat and human

โœ Scribed by Kamala Cherukupalli; Janet E. Larson; Martin Puterman; Harmanjatinder S. Sekhon; William M. Thurlbeck


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1997
Tongue
English
Weight
228 KB
Volume
24
Category
Article
ISSN
8755-6863

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โœฆ Synopsis


We compared the ontogeny of collagen (hydroxyproline), elastin (desmosine), soluble protein, and DNA in the lungs of rate and humans during gestation and postnatal life. In humans, lung weight/body weight ratios declined faster during gestation than postnatally, whereas in rats lung weight/body weight ratio declined little during gestation and then suddenly on the first day of life. Lung weight/body weight ratios may be lower than expected around term in humans, and prediction data are given to assess human pulmonary hypoplasia. Rats and humans differed in water content of their lungs, with rats showing a sharper decline during gestation. In the human lung, collagen and elastin made their appearance at an early stage of gestation; elastin. In particular, increased rapidly during gestation, suggesting a role in intrauterine alveolar formation. In the rat, elastin accumulation is primarily a postnatal event, as is alveolar formation. Hydroxyproline concentrations increased with conceptual age and continued to increase rapidly postnatally between 4 and 7 weeks in the rat, but slowed in the human after 60 weeks of conceptual age. Desmosine concentrations level off at the end of the study period in rats, while these are still increasing, although slowly, in humans. Overall lung growth, as assessed by weight, was linear in humans, but phases of lung growth were apparent in the rat, including one of minimal growth in the immediate postnatal period.


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