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ABSTRACT |
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Despite their broad clinical use, there is no standardized comparative study on the functional, biochemical, and morphologic differences of the various commercial surfactants in relation to native surfactant. We investigated these parameters in Alveofact, Curosurf, Exosurf, and Survanta, and compared them with native bovine (NBS) and porcine (NPS) surfactant. For Curosurf and Alveofact the concentrations necessary for minimal surface tensions < 5 mN/m were six to 12 times higher (1.5 and 3 mg/ml, respectively) than with NPS and NBS. Exosurf and Survanta only reached 22 and 8 mN/m, respectively. Increasing calcium to nonphysiologic concentrations artificially improved the function of Alveofact and Curosurf, but it had little effect on Exosurf and Survanta. Impaired surface activity of commercial versus native surfactants corresponded with their lack in surfactant protein SP-A and decreased SP-B/C. The higher surface activity of Curosurf compared with Alveofact corresponded with its higher concentration of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC). Despite their enrichment in DPPC Survanta and Exosurf exhibited poor surface activity because of low or absent SP-B/C. Ultrastructurally, Curosurf and Alveofact consisted mainly of lamellar and vesicular structures, which were also present in NPS and NBS. Exosurf contained crystalline structures only, whereas the DPPC-enriched Survanta contained separate lamellar/vesicular and crystalline structures. We conclude that in vitro surface activity of commercial surfactants is impaired compared with native surfactants at physiologic calcium concentrations. In the presence of SP-B/C, surface activity corresponds to the concentration of DPPC. Our data underscore the importance of a standardized protocol at physiologic calcium concentrations for the in vitro assessment of commercial surfactants.
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INTRODUCTION |
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Commercially available surfactant preparations have been investigated repeatedly with regard to their in vitro properties, and conclusions have been drawn from these in vitro data to
their in vivo physiologic effects. These in vitro properties are
usually assessed with reference to static surface adsorption
and dynamic changes in surface tension during cyclic film
compression using dynamic systems such as the pulsating bubble surfactometer (PBS). However, surfactant concentrations,
usually expressed as milligrams phospholipid (PL) per milliliter, and calcium concentrations in the sample buffers differ
widely between studies, ranging from 0.007 to 35 mg/ml for PL
and from zero to 6 mmol/L for calcium concentration. Moreover, a variety of different surfactant preparations was used
(1). These variations in at least three experimental parameters render it almost impossible to compare their results. Hence, we set out to determine the effect of surfactant PL
concentration on the in vitro properties of four commercially
available surfactant preparations at physiologic calcium concentrations and to compare these with the physical properties
of native bovine (NBS) and porcine (NPS) lung lavage surfactant as biologic standards. Additionally, we systematically determined the effect of calcium on surfactant function in vitro,
as some experimental protocols do not fit with the in vivo concentrations (1, 4, 5, 10, 11). As the parameters of surface tension function of a surfactant depend on apoproteins (2, 11), we
(1) used SP-A containing native surfactants as a physiologic
standard and (2) measured the concentrations of the hydrophobic surfactant proteins SP-B and SP-C in the different formulations. Moreover, although it is known that phosphatidylcholine (PC) molecular species composition modifies surface
tension functions of surfactant (13), there is little information
on the detailed molecular composition of therapeutic surfactants. Hence, we (3) determined the molecular composition of
PC species as the major surfactant PL and correlated our data
with their surface tension function. We were particularly interested in determining to what extent the physical properties required for a "good" surfactant, namely, an equilibrium surface
tension after 10 s adsorption (
ads) of 25 to 28 mN/m (14), and
a minimum surface tension (
min) of < 5 mN/m during cyclic
film compression (6, 14), are dependent on PL concentration,
and to what extent surface tension function of surfactants can
be correlated with their respective content in surfactant apoproteins and their different PC compositions.
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METHODS |
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Commercially Available Therapeutic Surfactants
Four commercially available surfactant preparations were used: Alveofact, Curosurf, Exosurf, and Survanta. Alveofact is a surfactant isolated from bovine lung lavage and then prepared by lipid extraction
and precipitation steps, which essentially remove hydrophilic proteins, including surfactant apoprotein A (SP-A) (15, 16). Curosurf is a
lipid extract surfactant from porcine lungs. However, it is not prepared from lung lavage but from whole minced porcine lung tissue.
Survanta is produced from minced bovine lung extracts with added dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC), palmitic acid, and triacylglycerol. The respective concentrations of total PC are 82, 79, and 74% of
total PL and 72, 78, and 62% of total mass for Alveofact, Curosurf,
and Survanta, respectively (16). Exosurf is a purely synthetic and protein-free surfactant containing DPPC, hexadecanol, and tyloxapol in a
relation of 13.5:1.5:1, containing 84% DPPC in relation to mass as the
only PL (15). The three surfactants being derived from biologic sources
contain SP-B and SP-C, but no SP-A, which is removed during lipid
extraction (15, 16). All surfactants were used prior to expiration date for functional analyses and stored as recommended by the manufacturer. For biochemical analyses sample aliquots were stored at
80° C.
Native Lung Lavage Surfactants
Bovine and porcine lung surfactants were obtained from lungs of
freshly slaughtered cattle and pigs and isolated by density gradient
centrifugation of blood-free bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF)
without organic extraction to preserve the SP-A in the preparations
(17). Lungs were transported within 30 min to the laboratory, and lavage was subsequently performed with 154 mmol/L saline at room temperature. Pig lungs were lavaged sequentially with 3 × 1 L, cattle lungs
with 3 × 5 L saline. The BALF fractions were pooled and the liquid was
centrifuged in 250-ml aliquots at 4° C and 270 × g for 15 min to remove
cells. The supernatant was then centrifuged at 27,000 × g and 4° C
for 2.5 h. From the 27,000 × g pellet, surfactant was isolated as previously described (17). In brief, the pellet was resuspended in 3.75 ml
154 mmol/L saline to a concentration of 15 to 20 mg PL/ml. To these
3.75 ml of suspension, 1.25 ml 64% NaBr in 154 mmol/L saline were
added. These suspensions were mixed and sequentially overlayered with 5 ml 13% NaBr in 154 mM saline and 1.5 ml 154 mmol/L saline. Samples were centrifuged at 114,000 × g for 100 min and the surfactant band between 13% NaBr and saline was then aspirated with a 5-ml disposable syringe. The band was transferred to a 25-ml Corex centrifugation tube, diluted with double-distilled water to a final volume of 25 ml, and centrifuged at 27,000 × g at 4° C for 60 min. The supernatant
was discarded, the pellet was resuspended in 6 to 10 ml 154 mmol/L
saline to which 1.5 mmol/L calcium chloride had been added, and
three 10-µl aliquots were taken for the determination of phospholipid
phosphorus concentration in the preparation. PL concentration of
such stock suspensions was 15 to 20 mg/ml. Surfactant preparations
were stored at
80° C until measurement and then diluted to the desired concentrations.
Preparation of Surfactant Samples for Surface Tension Measurement
Commercial and native surfactants were adjusted to an initial PL concentration of 6 and 8 mg/ml (8.0 and 10.7 µmol/ml), respectively, and then geometrically diluted in 1.5 ml Eppendorf tubes so that measurements could be performed at 8.0, 6.0, 4.0, 3.0, 2.0, 1.5, 1.0, 0.75, 0.5, 0.375, 0.25, 0.125, and 0.063 mg/ml. To investigate the effect of surfactant concentration on surface tension function in different preparations, measurements were performed at a final concentration of 1.5 mmol/L calcium chloride. For determining the effects of calcium, resuspension of surfactant was performed with 154 mmol/L saline in the absence of calcium, and the concentration of the latter then adjusted with calcium chloride to 0.0, 0.375, 0.75, 1.5, 3.0, or 6.0 mmol/L added calcium at the desired final PL concentrations. Calcium tightly bound to surfactant preparations and not removed by purification steps was neglected.
Surface Tension Measurements
Prior to the measurements, surfactant samples were vortexed for 30 s
and then sonicated for 60 s in a sonication bath to ensure complete
homogenization of the samples. Although sonication at high energies
may affect surface tension function of surfactant (18), pilot studies
had shown that this was not true for the procedure used in this study,
probably because of the brief sonication period and the use of the relatively soft Eppendorf tubes, which do not transmit much sonication
energy to the sample. Surface tension was determined in the pulsating bubble surfactometer (PBS; Electronetics, Amherst, NY) as described by Enhorning (19). Briefly, 36 µl of the surfactant suspension
were instilled into the sample chamber of the PBS at 37° C. A bubble
communicating with ambient air was created in the surfactant suspension and surfactant allowed to adsorb to the air/liquid interface for
10 s. After this time the bubble was pulsated at 20 oscillations per min
between a minimum radius of 0.4 mm and a maximum radius of 0.55 mm. The pressure across the bubble was measured by a pressure transducer and the surface tension calculated using the LaPlace equation. The surface tension after 10 s adsorption (
ads) and the minimum
(
min) and maximum (
max) surface tensions after 1, 3, 9, 30, and 100 cycles were determined. All measurements were performed five times
and the mean and standard deviation (SD) calculated.
Analysis of Phospholipids and Hydrophobic Surfactant Proteins
For PL and protein analysis the surfactant preparations were extracted according to Bligh and Dyer (20) and the PL phosphorus quantified from sample aliquots as described by Bartlett (21) after digestion of the organic components at 190° C for 35 min in the presence of 500 µl 70% perchloric acid (wt/vol) and 200 µl 30% hydrogen peroxide (wt/vol). Total PC and sphingomyelin were isolated from 500-nmol PL aliquots using 100 mg Varian Bondelut NH2 disposable cartridges (Varian, Hamburg, Germany) (22). Individual PC molecular species and sphingomyelin were then resolved by reverse-phase HPLC on a 4.6 × 250 mm Spherimage ODS II column (Schambeck, Bad Godesberg, Germany) and eluted PC species quantified by postcolumn fluorescence derivative formation in the presence of 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene (22). For the determination of total PC as a percentage of total PL, the samples were spiked with 50 nmol dimyristoyl-PC (PC14:0/14:0) as a standard prior to PC isolation. Total PC concentration in PL was then calculated as the sum of the PC peaks in relation to the standard (22). SP-B and SP-C were analyzed from 0.5 to 1.2 µmol PL aliquots using a Sephadex LH-60 column with UV detection at 228 nm as described by van Eijk and colleagues (23). Quantitation of proteins was performed using the fluorimetric assay by Böhlen and colleagues (24).
Electron Microscopy
Transmission electron microscopy was performed from all native and commercial surfactant preparations. As Exosurf, a nearly pure formulation of DPPC, could not successfully be fixed in the absence of tannic acid, all surfactant preparations were fixed for comparative analyses in the presence of tannic acid (25) as follows: Surfactant suspensions were centrifuged down at 60,000 × g for 1 h, and the pellets were fixed in a solution containing 3% glutaraldehyde and 1% tannic acid in 0.1 mol/L sodium cacodylate-HCl buffer at pH 7.2 and 4° C for 6 h. After postfixation in 2% osmium tetroxide for 2 h, the samples were dehydrated in ethanol dilutions and embedded in Epon (Serva, Heidelberg, Germany). Ultrathin sections about 60 nm thick were cut with a diamond knife and examined in a Zeiss EM10 electron microscope (Zeiss, Oberkochen, Germany). A point-counting method was used to determine the relative amounts of the different types of precipitates in the surfactant preparations (26). Using a square grid (mesh width, 10 mm) and prints of electron micrographs (final magnification: 63,000:1) the frequencies of the following types were quantified: (1) lamellar bodies, (2) tubular myelin, (3) multilamellar vesicular aggregations (less than 10 lipid layers), (4) crystalloid aggregations (10 layers or more). Other material such as amorphous substances and obliquely sectioned lipid layers were excluded from quantification. According to Weibel (26) the percentages of the point-countings represent the volume fractions of the four types.
Statistics
One-way analyses of variance were calculated using GraphPad Instat Version 1.11a (GraphPad Software, San Diego, CA), and results corrected using the Bonferroni method for multiple group comparisons.
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RESULTS |
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Influence of PL Concentration on Static and Dynamic Surface Tension Functions
Physical properties required for a "good" surfactant (see above)
at physiologic calcium concentrations (1.5 mmol/L) (27) were
achieved with lung lavage surfactant preparations from both bovine and porcine lungs even at a PL concentration of 0.25 mg/ml (Figure 1). In contrast, with Alveofact and Curosurf,
PL concentrations three to 12 times higher (0.75 and 3 mg/ml,
respectively) were required to achieve a
ads of < 29 mN/m,
and six to 12 times higher (3 and 1.5 mg/ml, respectively) to
achieve a
min of < 5 mN/m (Figure 1, top and middle panels).
Interestingly, Alveofact and Curosurf showed distinct plateaus, i.e.,
min stayed at around 22 to 24 mN/m below a critical
PL concentration of 3 and 1.5 mg/ml, respectively, and
reached values below 5 mN/m only with PL concentrations above these values. For Survanta and Exosurf, the lowest
ads measured was 36 (SD, 2.9) and 49 (SD, 0.5) mN/m, respectively, even at a PL concentration of 8 mg/ml (Figure 1, top
panel). Also, neither surfactant reached
min values < 5 mN/m,
although values close to this (8.3 mN/m) were achieved with
Survanta even at a PL concentration of 0.375 mg/ml. Exosurf
showed a peculiar behavior: its
min fell to 22 mN/m at a PL
concentration of 0.25 mg/ml, but reproducibly increased again
with increasing PL concentration.
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The data for
max were similar (Figure 1, bottom panel):
with both native bovine and porcine lavage surfactant,
max
fell to < 35 mN/m at a PL concentration of 0.25 mN/m,
whereas considerably higher concentrations (1.0 and 4.0 mg/
ml) were required to achieve this with Alveofact and Curosurf. Interestingly, the minimal concentrations required to
achieve
ads values below 29 mN/m and
max values below 35 mN/m were lower with Alveofact than with Curosurf (Figure 1, top and bottom panels), whereas the minimal concentration
to achieve
min values below 5 mN/m were lower with Curosurf (Figure 1, middle panel ). Survanta and Exosurf showed
max values of more than 47 mN/m at all concentrations measured (Figure 1, bottom panel ).
To investigate if the better surface tension function of the
native surfactants compared with Curosurf and Alveofact was
related to the lipid extraction process with removal of hydrophilic components, which the latter undergo, comparative
analyses of surface tension function were performed with lipid
extracts of native bovine lung lavage surfactant. These showed
that values required for a "good" surfactant were now only
achieved at concentrations of 2 mg/ml (
ads, 24.6 mN/m [SD,
0.5]);
min, 0.9 mN/m [SD, 0.1];
max 33.9 mN/m [SD, 0.7]),
whereas at 1 mg/ml, the corresponding values were 25.8 (1.0),
21.4 (0.5), and 31.3 (0.5) mN/m. The time required to achieve
min values < 5 mN/m during repeated cycling also varied considerably between preparations. We investigated this at the minimal surfactant concentrations necessary to achieve
min
values < 5 mN/m within 5 min of cycling. With both native
lung lavage surfactants,
min fell to < 5 mN/m already after the
first compression, whereas with Curosurf and Alveofact, nine
cycles were required (Figure 2). As neither Survanta nor Exosurf reached
min values < 5 mN/m, the number of cycles required to reach such values could not be determined with
these preparations.
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Influence of Calcium Concentration
Knowing that at a PL concentration of < 1.5 mg/ml and a calcium concentration of 1.5 mmol/L,
min values < 5 mN/m
could not be achieved with any commercially available surfactant, we determined to what extent this could be modified
by changes in calcium concentration. At a PL concentration
of 3 mg/ml, calcium had little effect, i.e.,
min remained < 5 mN/m with Alveofact and Curosurf and was around 30 mN/m
with Exosurf (data not shown). Only Survanta showed a decrease in
min, from 6.3 (SD, 0.5) to 3.1 (SD, 0.3) mN/m when calcium concentration was raised to 6 mmol/L (p < 0.05). At a PL concentration of 1 mg/ml, however, surface tension function of both Alveofact and Curosurf was markedly improved
by increasing calcium concentration. Hence, we investigated
in more detail the influence of calcium on these lipid extract
surfactants in comparison with native surfactants. As demonstrated in Figure 3, there was an abrupt fall in
min from > 20 to < 5 mN/m when calcium concentration was increased from
2.5 to 3 mmol/L for Alveofact, and from 3 to 4 mmol/L for
Curosurf.
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In contrast, with native porcine lung lavage surfactant,
min
stayed at < 5 mN/m independent of calcium concentration in
the suspension buffer. Because calcium had little effect on the
comparatively high surface tension of Survanta and Exosurf at
3 mg/ml, these two surfactants were not included in the measurements performed at a PL concentration of 1 mg/ml.
Biochemical Composition: Hydrophobic Proteins and PC Molecular Species
Native surfactants contained 1.5% SP-B and 2.8 to 4.5% SP-C per µmol PL (Table 1 and Figure 4). Commercial surfactants without supplementation by exogenous DPPC (Alveofact, Curosurf) contained only one half to one third of these proteins as compared with their progenitors NBS and NPS, whereas Survanta contained only 1/10 of the SP-B, but 1/2 of the SP-C found in NBS. PC was the only (Exosurf) or major (other surfactants) phospholipid in all therapeutic surfactants (Table 2). Bovine and porcine native surfactants contained 85.5 (SD, 4.7) and 84.7 (SD, 3.7) mol% PC in relation to total PL. Similarly, Alveofact, as a lung lavage surfactant, contained 83.7 (SD, 3.9) mol% PC. Comparable values were achieved with Survanta (79.1 [SD, 8.0]%), whereas PC content was lower for Curosurf (73.0 [SD, 2.7]%; p < 0.01). Sphingomyelin as a membrane component was present in low concentration in all natural surfactants investigated. Notably, Curosurf as a minced lung tissue extract contained significantly more sphingomyelin than did the corresponding lavage surfactant (Table 2), whereas Exosurf as a preparation of pure DPPC contained no sphingomyelin (Figure 5).
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As demonstrated in Table 3 and Figure 5, there were remarkable differences in the composition of PC molecular species of both native and commercial surfactant preparations. Two of the bovine surfactants contained 40% DPPC (native, 40.2% [SD, 2.8]; Alveofact, 39.4% [SD, 2.1]), compared with more than 50% for the porcine surfactants (native, 59.5% [SD, 3.2]; Curosurf, 50.2% [SD, 2.2]). Survanta, as a bovine surfactant with exogenous DPPC added, contained 74.9% (SD, 5.0) DPPC and Exosurf 99.5% (SD, 0.8). Palmitoylmyristoyl-PC (PC, 16:0/14:0) and palmitoylpalmitoleoyl-PC (PC 16:0/16:1), the two other PC species, relatively unique to mammalian surfactant, did not differ significantly between native surfactants, Alveofact, and Curosurf. However, they were decreased in Survanta, because of the addition of exogenous DPPC, and absent in Exosurf. On the other hand, palmitoyloleoyl-PC (PC 16:0/18:1; POPC) was significantly increased in bovine compared with porcine surfactant and in the commercial compared with the corresponding native surfactants, possibly because of the manufacturing processes of extraction and precipitation (Table 3 and Figure 5). Again, Survanta contained much less POPC than the other surfactant preparations. All other PC species, particularly the highly unsaturated ones such as palmitoylarachidonoyl-PC (PC 16:0/20:4) and stearoylarachidonoyl-PC (PC 18:0/20:4) were only minor components in any surfactant preparation.
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Electron Microscopy
Native surfactant from porcine and bovine lungs showed a similar ultrastructure, mainly consisting of multilamellar and vesicular material (Figures 6A and 6C). Some tubular myelin was found in both preparations, but it was more prominent in bovine surfactant (Figure 6A). Native surfactant before and after sonication showed only marginal alterations of its ultrastructure (Figures 6B and 6D). Commercial surfactant preparations differed from native surfactants in the general absence of tubular myelin and in the structure of the lamellar and vesicular material (Figures 7 and 8). As demonstrated, Alveofact and Curosurf mainly consisted of lamellar and vesicular structures (Figures 7A and 7D and Figure 8). In contrast, Exosurf showed crystalline formations only and may be interpreted as DPPC crystals (Figures 7B and 8). Such structures were only a minor compound in native (Figure 6) and lipid extract surfactants (Figures 7 and 8). Survanta, a mixture of lipid extract surfactant supplemented with DPPC, showed vesicular structures (Figures 7C and 8) similar to those found in Alveofact or Curosurf, and also crystal-like structures similar to those found in Exosurf. This finding suggests that DPPC molecules were not or incompletely integrated into the surfactant structures.
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DISCUSSION |
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This study has for the first time defined parameters of surface tension function under standardized experimental conditions in four commercial surfactant preparations used clinically, comparing these with each other and with native surfactants in vitro. Moreover, it quantified the major biochemical components of surfactants such as SP-B and SP-C and individual molecular species of PC as functionally distinct components and defined the effect of nonphysiologically high calcium concentrations in the suspending medium as a potential source of misinterpreting surfactant activity in vitro.
Pharmacodynamics of Surfactants
As with other therapeutic agents, surfactants can be characterized by their own maximal effects (intrinsic activity) and by their concentration-effect curves (potency) in relation to a
standard (28), in this case native surfactants. Potency usually
describes the concentration of a therapeutic agent required to
achieve half its maximal effect (28). In this study, a 50% effect
was impossible to define, as
min of both the native (NBS, NPS)
and the corresponding nonmodified lipid extract surfactants
(Alveofact, Curosurf) showed no concentration-dependent
continuum in the PBS, but two distinct, concentration-dependent plateaus (at ~ 20 and < 5 mN/m). Thus, we could define
only the concentrations above which
min fell to the lower plateau. Interestingly, the minimal concentration necessary to
achieve
min values < 5 mN/m was inversely correlated with the
concentration of DPPC in the SP-B/C containing "natural" surfactants Alveofact and Curosurf. As DPPC is the essential
surfactant molecule to lower surface tension at the air-liquid
interface (29), this correlation is not surprising, and it confirms
previous measurements by Gail and colleagues (30), who demonstrated that the amount of DPPC in alveolar surfactant
closely correlates with the surface area of lungs in vivo. Hence,
in the presence of sufficient concentrations of SP-B/C as promotors of surface activity under dynamic conditions, and possibly other adsorption-promoting surfactant components like
POPC, palmitoylmyristoyl-PC (PC 16:0/14:0) and palmitoylpalmitoleoyl-PC (PC 16:0/16:1) (13), the concentration of DPPC
in a therapeutic surfactant is critical for its potency, both in a
standardized in vitro protocol and, possibly, also in vivo.
Surface Tension Function in Relation to Surfactant Proteins
Measurement of surface tension function strongly depends on
the technique applied. For example, Exosurf easily lowers surface tension to below 5 mN/m in the Wilhelmy balance, but not
under the dynamic conditions of the pulsating bubble surfactometer (31). Our data fit with those of other investigators (11),
which showed poor surface tension function at low concentrations or absence of SP-B/C. Whereas native surfactant reached
ads values of < 29 mN/m and
min values of < 5 mN/m at concentrations of 0.25 mg/ml, neither therapeutic surfactant was
able to achieve such values at these concentrations. Native surfactant contains specific proteins, particularly SP-A, SP-B, and
SP-C, and is believed to be transformed to tubular myelin under
the influence of SP-A and -B, whereas SP-B and -C promote
surface adsorption (11, 32). None of the commercial surfactants
contains SP-A since all are lipid extracts (15, 16). Although lung
function is still maintained with a surfactant devoid of SP-A at
sufficient concentrations (33), our data together with those of
Ingenito and colleagues (11) clearly show that in the absence of
SP-A surfactant potency is impaired. In addition to this, therapeutic surfactants, including Alveofact and Curosurf, contain
less SP-B/C than NBS and NPS. The importance of SP-B and
SP-C in promoting the rapid adsorption of surfactant PL to the
air-liquid interface has been clearly demonstrated (34) and the
deleterious effects of SP-A, -B, and -C deficiency on surface
tension function have also been shown for lipid extracts from
NBS and for conductive airway surfactant from pigs, which
does not contain SP-B or -C (17, 35). Hence, we conclude that
in commercial surfactants the reduced SP-B/C content, together
with a complete absence of SP-A, is an important biochemical
parameter of impaired surface tension function. Whether the
dosage of therapeutic surfactants containing SP-A or nonimmunogenic SP-A analogs can be lower under clinical conditions is
still somewhat hypothetical (36), but it is of clinical interest because of the high costs of surfactant treatment in adults.
Surface Tension Function in Relation to PC Molecular Species
Although the lower potencies of Curosurf and Alveofact compared with native surfactants can be explained by their differences in surfactant protein content, the higher potency of Curosurf over Alveofact in reaching
min values < 5 mN/m, and the
better static (
ads) and dynamic (
max) adsorption properties of
Alveofact over Curosurf (Figure 1, top and bottom panels), are
not associated with such differences. However, PC molecular
species composition strongly influences surface tension function of surfactants (13), which is distinctly different in Curosurf when compared with that in Alveofact. Bovine surfactant
contains less DPPC and more POPC than does porcine (17)
and human (37) surfactant. Although DPPC is responsible for
lowering surface tension at the air-liquid interface at end-expiration (32), POPC accelerates the adsorption of surfactant to
the interface (13). Consistent with these experimental findings, Curosurf, containing more DPPC than Alveofact,
reached
min values < 5 mN/m at lower concentrations than
did Alveofact (1.5 versus 3 mg/ml). On the other hand, Alveofact, which contains more POPC, displayed better static and
dynamic adsorption rates. Hence, the static and dynamic differences between Curosurf and Alveofact seen in vitro can be
explained by their different PC molecular species composition. Although the practical relevance of such molecular differences remains to be elucidated, we conclude from our data
that porcine surfactant better meets the physiologic PC composition of human surfactant (37).
The other commercial surfactants investigated are either
artificially enriched in DPPC (Survanta) or contain DPPC as
the only original surfactant component (Exosurf). Their
min
values were impaired in relation to both Alveofact and Curosurf. However, they not only contain less or no hydrophobic
surfactant proteins (SP-B and SP-C) than Alveofact and Curosurf, but are also impoverished in (Survanta) or free of (Exosurf) POPC, PC 16:0/16:1, and PC 16:0/14:0, three surface adsorption promoting PC species (13). In addition, the ultrastucture
of Survanta and Exosurf considerably differed from that of
other surfactants. Exosurf contained only large crystalline
structures (apparently DPPC), which were present in only
small concentrations in NBS, NPS, Alveofact, or Curosurf. In
Survanta, both the vesicular/oligolamellar structures of Alveofact and the crystalline structures characteristic of Exosurf
were present. Hence, incorporation of the added DPPC into
the natural surfactant components seemed to be either incomplete in Survanta or not to have occurred at all. As rapid
DPPC adsorption requires the integration and assistance of
surfactant proteins (11, 38, 39) and unsaturated PC (13), exogenous DPPC probably did not improve the surface tension
function of Survanta under the dynamic in vitro conditions
represented by the PBS. In agreement with our quantitative
morphologic data, Survanta and Exosurf were not only less
potent than Alveofact or Curosurf, but also displayed an impaired intrinsic activity, as
min values below 5 mN/m were not
achieved. These findings contrast to those of McMillan and colleagues (40), who found
min values < 5 mN/m for Exosurf in the captive bubble surfactometer, but agree with recent
data on the poor adsorption properties of DPPC or isolated
PL mixtures to gas-liquid interfaces in the absence of SP-B/C
(11). On the basis of these findings, we speculate that the clinical response to exogenous Survanta or Exosurf seen in patients with respiratory distress syndrome is not predominantly
due to the intrinsic surface activity of these therapeutics, but
involves the contribution of other, endogenous, mechanisms
such as those occurring during reprocessing of surfactant
phospholipids (41).
Calcium as a Factor Affecting Surface Tension Measurement
Comparability of results from studies on functional differences
between surfactant preparations (1) is hampered by the large variability in the experimental conditions under which
these were performed. One of the experimental conditions
that varies considerably between studies is calcium concentration. Calcium is required for an in vitro assembly of tubular
myelin (42) and improves surface tension function in vitro (1).
Optimal adsorption of lipid extract surfactants requires the
presence of calcium ions in the subphase (43) and, also, the
ability of SP-A, -B, and -C to enhance PL adsorption from
the subphase into the air/liquid interphase was shown to be
calcium-dependent (44). In addition, calcium is important
for maintaining large aggregate formation during surface-area
cycling by stabilizing tubular myelin in native surfactant (48).
As demonstrated by our data, function of native surfactant
was independent from additional calcium in the suspending
buffer at the concentrations tested. In contrast, surface tension
function of commercial lipid extract surfactants was strongly
influenced by calcium. The physiologic calcium concentration
in the alveolus is approximately 1.5 mmol/L (27), which is considerably below that used in some in vitro studies (1, 4, 5, 10,
11). We found that surface tension function required for a
"good" surfactant was not achieved with either Exosurf or
Survanta at physiologic calcium concentrations (1.5 mmol/L),
but it could be achieved with Survanta at nonphysiologically high calcium concentrations (6 mmol/L). In contrast, Curosurf and Alveofact met these requirements already at 1.5 mmol/L
calcium, but only at PL concentrations that were three to 12 times higher than those of native surfactants. However, when
calcium was artificially increased, the critical surfactant concentration required to achieve
min values < 5 mN/m was diminished to 1 mg/ml for both Alveofact and Curosurf. Hence,
the therapeutic surfactants, which are less effective than native
surfactants, may erroneously be regarded as equivalent to native surfactants if investigated at high calcium concentrations.
Clinical Relevance of In Vitro Surfactant Analyses
All commercial surfactant preparations investigated in this study are widely used and have been clinically shown to be effective in infant respiratory distress syndrome (IRDS) (43). However, their functional differences under standardized conditions in vitro, both compared with each other and with their native progenitors, and the putative consequences of their biochemical differences, are less clear. In animal experiments surfactant containing a synthetic SP-A analogue was superior to surfactant lacking this component (36). In the future, surfactant may become a routine treatment of diseases other than IRDS, e.g., the acquired respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) or acute asthma (49). Functional requirements of a therapeutic surfactant under these conditions may be different from those in IRDS since in the former, alveolar or bronchiolar dysfunction is due to inhibition rather than to lack of surfactant. Moreover, it is still important to consider SP-A- or SP-A-analogue-containing surfactants with respect to dosage reductions caused by their higher intrinsic activities (36, 50) because SP-A may help to prevent surfactant inhibition (50) and because SP-A, added to a commercial surfactant, improves dynamic compliance and lung recruitment (51). Finally, there is increasing evidence that additional components such as individual PL molecular species exert distinct effects on both surfactant function and on lung cells (12, 13). Hence, we postulate that despite the overall clinical success of both natural and synthetic surfactants in IRDS, a standardized and detailed protocol for functional and biochemical analyses is a prerequisite for the characterization of surfactants as therapeutic drugs.
We conclude that unmodified lipid extract surfactants display an intrinsic activity comparable to that of native surfactant. However, their potency is impaired compared with native surfactants, likely because of the absence of SP-A and a
reduced concentration of SP-B/C. Differences in the concentrations of Alveofact and Curosurf necessary to reach
min values below 5 mN/m and adequate
ads or
max values can be explained by their differences in DPPC and POPC concentrations,
which is in agreement with the experimental data on the functional properties of individual PL components. In contrast,
semisynthetic (Survanta) or synthetic (Exosurf) surfactants were unable to demonstrate surface tension properties comparable to those of native or lipid extract surfactants. Finally, the surface tension function of "natural" surfactant preparations (Alveofact, Curosurf) can be erroneously regarded as equivalent to native surfactant if in vitro calcium concentrations are
above the physiologic range. Our data underscore the importance of a standardized protocol for the assessment of surfactant function and for a detailed biochemical analysis, using native surfactant as a reference.
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Footnotes |
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Supported in part by Grant Ha1959/2 from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft. Commercial surfactants were gifts from Dr. Karl Thomae GmbH (Alveofact), Serono Pharma GmbH (Curosurf), Abbott GmbH (Survanta), and Wellcome GmbH (Exosurf).
Correspondence and requests for reprints should be addressed to Christian F. Poets, M.D., Department of Paediatric Pulmonology and Neonatology, Hannover Medical School, 30623 Hannover, Germany, E-mail: poets.christian{at}mh-hannover.de
(Received in original form August 24, 1999 and in revised form March 28, 2000).
Acknowledgments: The writers gratefully acknowledge the excellent technical assistance of Mrs. Christa Acevedo, Ms. Susanne Fassbender, and Ms. Kerstin Werner.
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