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A ferret model of COPD-related chronic bronchitis
S. Vamsee Raju, … , Mark T. Dransfield, Steven M. Rowe
S. Vamsee Raju, … , Mark T. Dransfield, Steven M. Rowe
Published September 22, 2016
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2016;1(15):e87536. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.87536.
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Resource and Technical Advance Pulmonology

A ferret model of COPD-related chronic bronchitis

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Abstract

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is the third leading cause of death in the US. The majority of COPD patients have symptoms of chronic bronchitis, which lacks specific therapies. A major impediment to therapeutic development has been the absence of animal models that recapitulate key clinical and pathologic features of human disease. Ferrets are well suited for the investigation of the significance of respiratory diseases, given prior data indicating similarities to human airway physiology and submucosal gland distribution. Here, we exposed ferrets to chronic cigarette smoke and found them to approximate complex clinical features of human COPD. Unlike mice, which develop solely emphysema, smoke-exposed ferrets exhibited markedly higher numbers of early-morning spontaneous coughs and sporadic infectious exacerbations as well as a higher level of airway obstruction accompanied by goblet cell metaplasia/hyperplasia and increased mucus expression in small airways, indicative of chronic bronchitis and bronchiolitis. Overall, we demonstrate the first COPD animal model exhibiting clinical and pathologic features of chronic bronchitis to our knowledge, providing a key advance that will greatly facilitate the preclinical development of novel treatments for this disease.

Authors

S. Vamsee Raju, Hyunki Kim, Stephen A. Byzek, Li Ping Tang, John E. Trombley, Patricia Jackson, Lawrence Rasmussen, J. Michael Wells, Emily Falk Libby, Erik Dohm, Lindy Winter, Sharon L. Samuel, Kurt R. Zinn, J. Edwin Blalock, Trenton R. Schoeb, Mark T. Dransfield, Steven M. Rowe

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Figure 2

Histopathologic evidence of chronic mucus hypersecretion and goblet cell hyperplasia in a ferret model of COPD.

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Histopathologic evidence of chronic mucus hypersecretion and goblet cell...
(A) Mucus-expressing goblet cells and submucosal glands (yellow arrows) were stained with PAS (magenta) in tracheal sections of ferrets exposed to room air or cigarette smoke for 6 months. Scale bar: 34 μm. (B) Similarly, lung sections from the same ferrets were stained with AB-PAS to highlight mucus-expressing cells (deep blue). Scale bar: 110 μm. (C) The same staining as in B demonstrating goblet cell hyperplasia and increased epithelial cell height. Scale bar: 17 μm. (D and E) Quantitative analyses demonstrating epithelial hyperplasia, as measured by increased epithelial cell height (D) controlled for luminal area (E). (F) Goblet cell area controlled for luminal area in cigarette smoke–exposed ferrets. (G) Goblet cell area controlled for luminal area expressed as a function of the airway luminal (inner) diameter quintile (diameter; quintile 1: 116–293 μm, quintile 2: 294–415 μm, quintile 3: 424–535 μm, quintile 4: 537–793 μm, and quintile 5: 810–2,651 μm). n = 8/group. *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ****P < 0.0001.

Copyright © 2023 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN 2379-3708

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