Sulforhodamine B interacts with albumin to lower surface tension and protect against ventilation injury of flooded alveoli

Angana Banerjee Kharge, You Wu, Carrie E. Perlman

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

In the acute respiratory distress syndrome, alveolar flooding by proteinaceous edema liquid impairs gas exchange. Mechanical ventilation is used as a supportive therapy. In regions of the edematous lung, alveolar flooding is heterogeneous, and stress is concentrated in aerated alveoli. Ventilation exacerbates stress concentrations and injuriously overexpands aerated alveoli. Injury degree is proportional to surface tension, T. Lowering T directly lessens injury. Furthermore, as heterogeneous flooding causes the stress concentrations, promoting equitable liquid distribution between alveoli should, indirectly, lessen injury. We present a new theoretical analysis suggesting that liquid is trapped in discrete alveoli by a pressure barrier that is proportional to T. Experimentally, we identify two rhodamine dyes, sulforhodamine B and rhodamine WT, as surface active in albumin solution and investigate whether the dyes lessen ventilation injury. In the isolated rat lung, we micropuncture a surface alveolus, instill albumin solution, and obtain an area with heterogeneous alveolar flooding. We demonstrate that rhodamine dye addition lowers T, reduces ventilation-induced injury, and facilitates liquid escape from flooded alveoli. In vitro we show that rhodamine dye is directly surface active in albumin solution. We identify sulforhodamine B as a potential new therapeutic agent for the treatment of the acute respiratory distress syndrome.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)355-364
Number of pages10
JournalJournal of Applied Physiology
Volume118
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Feb 2015

Keywords

  • Acute respiratory distress syndrome
  • Alveolar mechanics
  • Rhodamine
  • Surface tension
  • Ventilation injury

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