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Dive into the research topics where Sandra Orgeig is active.

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Featured researches published by Sandra Orgeig.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1998

The role of lipids in pulmonary surfactant

Ruud A. W. Veldhuizen; Kaushik Nag; Sandra Orgeig; Fred Possmayer

Pulmonary surfactant is composed of approx. 90% lipids and 10% protein. This review article focusses on the lipid components of surfactant. The first sections will describe the lipid composition of mammalian surfactant and the techniques that have been utilized to study the involvement of these lipids in reducing the surface tension at an air-liquid interface, the main function of pulmonary surfactant. Subsequently, the roles of specific lipids in surfactant will be discussed. For the two main surfactant phospholipids, phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylglycerol, specific contributions to the overall surface tension reducing properties of surfactant have been indicated. In contrast, the role of the minor phospholipid components and the neutral lipid fraction of surfactant is less clear and requires further study. Recent technical advances, such as fluorescent microscopic techniques, hold great potential for expanding our knowledge of how surfactant lipids, including some of the minor components, function. Interesting information regarding surfactant lipids has also been obtained in studies evaluating the surfactant system in non-mammalian species. In certain non-mammalian species (and at least one marsupial), surfactant lipid composition, most notably disaturated phosphatidylcholine and cholesterol, changes drastically under different conditions such as an alteration in body temperature. The impact of these changes on surfactant function provide insight into the function of these lipids, not only in non-mammalian lungs but also in the surfactant from mammalian species.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology A-molecular & Integrative Physiology | 2001

The roles of cholesterol in pulmonary surfactant: insights from comparative and evolutionary studies.

Sandra Orgeig; Christopher B. Daniels

In most eutherian mammals, cholesterol (Chol) comprises approximately 8–10 wt.% or 14–20 mol.% of both alveolar and lamellar body surfactant. It is regarded as an integral component of pulmonary surfactant, yet few studies have concentrated on its function or control. Throughout the evolution of the vertebrates, the contribution of cholesterol relative to surfactant phospholipids decreases, while that of the disaturated phospholipids (DSP) increases. Chol generally appears to dominate in animals with primitive bag-like lungs that lack septation, in the saccular lung of snakes or swimbladders which are not used predominantly for respiration, and also in immature lungs. It is possible that in these systems, cholesterol represents a protosurfactant. Cholesterol is controlled separately from the phospholipid (PL) component in surfactant. For example, in heterothermic mammals such as the fat-tailed dunnart, Sminthopsis crassicaudata, and the microchiropteran bat, Chalinolobus gouldii, and also in the lizard, Ctenophorus nuchalis, the relative amount of Chol increases in cold animals. During the late stages of embryonic development in chickens and lizards, the Chol to PL and Chol to DSP ratios decrease dramatically. While in isolated lizard lungs, adrenaline and acetylcholine stimulate the secretion of surfactant PL, Chol secretion remains unaffected. This is also supported in isolated cell studies of lizards and dunnarts. The rapid changes in the Chol to PL ratio in response to various physiological stimuli suggest that these two components have different turnover rates and may be packaged and processed differently. Infusion of [3H]cholesterol into the rat tail vein resulted in a large increase in Chol specific activity within 30 min in the lamellar body (LB) fraction, but over a 48-h period, failed to appear in the alveolar surfactant fraction. Analysis of the limiting membrane of the lamellar bodies revealed a high (76%) concentration of LB cholesterol. The majority of lamellar body Chol is, therefore, not released into the alveolar compartment, as the limiting membrane fuses with the cell membrane upon exocytosis. It appears unlikely, therefore, that lamellar bodies are the major source of alveolar Chol. It is possible that the majority of alveolar Chol is synthesised endogenously within the lung and stored independently from surfactant phospholipids. The role of cholesterol in the limiting membrane of the lamellar body may be to enable fast and easy processing by maintaining the membrane in a relatively fluid state.


Journal of Molecular Evolution | 1998

CONSERVATION OF SURFACTANT PROTEIN A : EVIDENCE FOR A SINGLE ORIGIN FOR VERTEBRATE PULMONARY SURFACTANT

Lucy C. Sullivan; Christopher B. Daniels; I. D. Phillips; Sandra Orgeig; Jeffrey A. Whitsett

Abstract. Surface tension is reduced at the air–liquid interface in the lung by a mixture of lipids and proteins termed pulmonary surfactant. This study is the first to provide evidence for the presence of a surfactant-specific protein (Surfactant Protein A—SP-A) in the gas-holding structures of representatives of all the major vertebrate groups. Western blot analysis demonstrated cross-reactivity between an antihuman SP-A antibody and material lavaged from lungs or swimbladders of members from all vertebrate groups. Immunocytochemistry localized this SP-A–like protein to the air spaces of lungs from the actinopterygiian fish and lungfish. Northern blot analysis indicated that regions of the mouse SP-A cDNA sequence are complementary to lung mRNA from all species examined. The presence of an SP-A–like protein and SP-A mRNA in members of all the major vertebrate groups implies that the surfactant system had a single evolutionary origin in the vertebrates. Moreover, the evolution of the surfactant system must have been a prerequisite for the evolution of airbreathing. The presence of SP-A in the goldfish swimbladder demonstrates a role for the surfactant system in an organ that is no longer used for airbreathing.


Respiratory Physiology & Neurobiology | 2010

Recent advances in alveolar biology: Evolution and function of alveolar proteins

Sandra Orgeig; Pieter S. Hiemstra; Edwin J.A. Veldhuizen; Cristina Casals; Howard Clark; Angela Haczku; Lars Knudsen; Fred Possmayer

This review is focused on the evolution and function of alveolar proteins. The lung faces physical and environmental challenges, due to changing pressures/volumes and foreign pathogens, respectively. The pulmonary surfactant system is integral in protecting the lung from these challenges via two groups of surfactant proteins - the small molecular weight hydrophobic SPs, SP-B and -C, that regulate interfacial adsorption of the lipids, and the large hydrophilic SPs, SP-A and -D, which are surfactant collectins capable of inhibiting foreign pathogens. Further aiding pulmonary host defence are non-surfactant collectins and antimicrobial peptides that are expressed across the biological kingdoms. Linking to the first symposium session, which emphasised molecular structure and biophysical function of surfactant lipids and proteins, this review begins with a discussion of the role of temperature and hydrostatic pressure in shaping the evolution of SP-C in mammals. Transitioning to the role of the alveolus in innate host defence we discuss the structure, function and regulation of antimicrobial peptides, the defensins and cathelicidins. We describe the recent discovery of novel avian collectins and provide evidence for their role in preventing influenza infection. This is followed by discussions of the roles of SP-A and SP-D in mediating host defence at the alveolar surface and in mediating inflammation and the allergic response of the airways. Finally we discuss the use of animal models of lung disease including knockouts to develop an understanding of the role of these proteins in initiating and/or perpetuating disease with the aim of developing new therapeutic strategies.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2010

Intrauterine growth restriction delays surfactant protein maturation in the sheep fetus.

Sandra Orgeig; Tamara A. Crittenden; Ceilidh L. Marchant; I. Caroline McMillen; Janna L. Morrison

Pulmonary surfactant is synthesized by type II alveolar epithelial cells to regulate the surface tension at the air-liquid interface of the air-breathing lung. Developmental maturation of the surfactant system is controlled by many factors including oxygen, glucose, catecholamines, and cortisol. The intrauterine growth-restricted (IUGR) fetus is hypoxemic and hypoglycemic, with elevated plasma catecholamine and cortisol concentrations. The impact of IUGR on surfactant maturation is unclear. Here we investigate the expression of surfactant protein (SP) A, B, and C in lung tissue of fetal sheep at 133 and 141 days of gestation (term 150 +/- 3 days) from control and carunclectomized Merino ewes. Placentally restricted (PR) fetuses had a body weight <2 SD from the mean of control fetuses and a mean gestational Pa(O(2)) <17 mmHg. PR fetuses had reduced absolute, but not relative, lung weight, decreased plasma glucose concentration, and increased plasma cortisol concentration. Lung SP-A, -B, and -C protein and mRNA expression was reduced in PR compared with control fetuses at both ages. SP-B and -C but not SP-A mRNA expression and SP-A but not SP-B or -C protein expression increased with gestational age. Mean gestational Pa(O(2)) was positively correlated with SP-A, -B, and -C protein and SP-B and -C mRNA expression in the younger cohort. SP-A and -B gene expression was inversely related to plasma cortisol concentration. Placental restriction, leading to chronic hypoxemia and hypercortisolemia in the carunclectomy model, results in significant inhibition of surfactant maturation. These data suggest that IUGR fetuses are at significant risk of lung complications, especially if born prematurely.


Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology | 1998

Evolution of surface activity related functions of vertebrate pulmonary surfactant.

Christopher B. Daniels; Olga Vlagislavovna Lopatko; Sandra Orgeig

1. Pulmonary surfactant is a mixture of lipids and proteins that lines the air‐liquid interface of the lungs of all vertebrates. In mammals, it functions to reduce and vary surface tension, which helps to decrease the work of breathing, provide alveolar stability and prevent alveolar oedema. The present review examines the evolution and relative importance of these surface activity related functions in the lungs of vertebrates.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology A-molecular & Integrative Physiology | 2001

The comparative biology of pulmonary surfactant: past, present and future

Christopher B. Daniels; Sandra Orgeig

Richard E. Pattle contributed enormously to the biology of the pulmonary surfactant system. However, Pattle can also be regarded as the founding father of comparative and evolutionary research of the surfactant system. He contributed eight seminal papers of the 167 publications we have located on this topic. In particular, Pattle produced a synthesis interpreting the evolution of the surfactant system that formed the foundation for the area. Prepared 25 years ago this synthesis spawned the three great discoveries in the comparative biology of the surfactant system: (1) that the surfactant system has been highly conserved throughout the enormous radiation of the air breathing vertebrates; (2) that temperature is the major selective condition that influences surfactant composition; (3) that acting as an anti-adhesive is one primitive and ubiquitous function of vertebrate surfactant. Here we review the literature and history of the comparative and evolutionary biology of the surfactant system and highlight the areas of comparative physiology that will contribute to our understanding of the surfactant system in the future. In our view the surfactant system is a neatly packaged system, located in a single cell and highly conserved, yet spectacularly complex. The surfactant system is one of the best systems we know to examine evolutionary processes in physiology as well as gain important insights into gas transfer by complex organisms.


Physiological and Biochemical Zoology | 2004

The origin and evolution of the surfactant system in fish: Insights into the evolution of lungs and swim bladders

Christopher B. Daniels; Sandra Orgeig; Lucy C. Sullivan; Nicholas Ling; Michael B. Bennett; Samuel Schürch; Adalberto Luis Val; Colin J. Brauner

Several times throughout their radiation fish have evolved either lungs or swim bladders as gas‐holding structures. Lungs and swim bladders have different ontogenetic origins and can be used either for buoyancy or as an accessory respiratory organ. Therefore, the presence of air‐filled bladders or lungs in different groups of fishes is an example of convergent evolution. We propose that air breathing could not occur without the presence of a surfactant system and suggest that this system may have originated in epithelial cells lining the pharynx. Here we present new data on the surfactant system in swim bladders of three teleost fish (the air‐breathing pirarucu Arapaima gigas and tarpon Megalops cyprinoides and the non‐air‐breathing New Zealand snapper Pagrus auratus). We determined the presence of surfactant using biochemical, biophysical, and morphological analyses and determined homology using immunohistochemical analysis of the surfactant proteins (SPs). We relate the presence and structure of the surfactant system to those previously described in the swim bladders of another teleost, the goldfish, and those of the air‐breathing organs of the other members of the Osteichthyes, the more primitive air‐breathing Actinopterygii and the Sarcopterygii. Snapper and tarpon swim bladders are lined with squamous and cuboidal epithelial cells, respectively, containing membrane‐bound lamellar bodies. Phosphatidylcholine dominates the phospholipid (PL) profile of lavage material from all fish analyzed to date. The presence of the characteristic surfactant lipids in pirarucu and tarpon, lamellar bodies in tarpon and snapper, SP‐B in tarpon and pirarucu lavage, and SPs (A, B, and D) in swim bladder tissue of the tarpon provide strong evidence that the surfactant system of teleosts is homologous with that of other fish and of tetrapods. This study is the first demonstration of the presence of SP‐D in the air‐breathing organs of nonmammalian species and SP‐B in actinopterygian fishes. The extremely high cholesterol/disaturated PL and cholesterol/PL ratios of surfactant extracted from tarpon and pirarucu bladders and the poor surface activity of tarpon surfactant are characteristics of the surfactant system in other fishes. Despite the paraphyletic phylogeny of the Osteichthyes, their surfactant is uniform in composition and may represent the vertebrate protosurfactant.


Journal of Pregnancy | 2012

Antenatal Steroids and the IUGR Fetus: Are Exposure and Physiological Effects on the Lung and Cardiovascular System the Same as in Normally Grown Fetuses?

Janna L. Morrison; Kimberley J. Botting; Poh Seng Soo; Erin V. McGillick; Jennifer Hiscock; Song Zhang; I. Caroline McMillen; Sandra Orgeig

Glucocorticoids are administered to pregnant women at risk of preterm labour to promote fetal lung surfactant maturation. Intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) is associated with an increased risk of preterm labour. Hence, IUGR babies may be exposed to antenatal glucocorticoids. The ability of the placenta or blood brain barrier to remove glucocorticoids from the fetal compartment or the brain is compromised in the IUGR fetus, which may have implications for lung, brain, and heart development. There is conflicting evidence on the effect of exogenous glucocorticoids on surfactant protein expression in different animal models of IUGR. Furthermore, the IUGR fetus undergoes significant cardiovascular adaptations, including altered blood pressure regulation, which is in conflict with glucocorticoid-induced alterations in blood pressure and flow. Hence, antenatal glucocorticoid therapy in the IUGR fetus may compromise regulation of cardiovascular development. The role of cortisol in cardiomyocyte development is not clear with conflicting evidence in different species and models of IUGR. Further studies are required to study the effects of antenatal glucocorticoids on lung, brain, and heart development in the IUGR fetus. Of specific interest are the aetiology of IUGR and the resultant degree, duration, and severity of hypoxemia.


Physiological and Biochemical Zoology | 1995

The Evolution of the Vertebrate Pulmonary Surfactant System

Christopher B. Daniels; Sandra Orgeig; Allan W. Smits

Lung structure and function vary widely among vertebrates. Despite their diversity, all lungs are internal, fluid-lined structures that change volume and hence face similar biophysical problems. For example, if the surface tension of the fluid lining is high, this may lead to collapse or flooding of the lung In mammals, these problems are largely overcome by the presence of a mixture of surface-active lipids and proteins (pulmonary surfactant), which lowers the surface tension of the fluid lining, particularly at very low lung volumes. This action is due primarily to a disaturated phospholipid (DSP), predominantly dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC), which exists in the ordered, gel state below 41°C Cholesterol (CHOL) and unsaturated phospholipids (USPs) promote respreading upon inflation by converting DPPC to the disordered, liquid-crystalline state. It appeared to us that a DSP-rich surfactant, with its high phase transition temperature, is likely to be of only limited use in the lungs of ectothermic vertebrates that have body temperatures between 20° and 30°C We determined the presence and composition of surfactant in species from a range of vertebrate taxa maintained at 23°C and related variations in phospholipid (PL) head groups, CHOL/PL, DSP/PL, and CHOL/DSP to lung structure and function, phylogeny, and environmental selection pressures such as body temperature. All air breathers examined had a pulmonary surfactant containing USP, DSP, and CHOL. In general, mammals had greater amounts of surfactant lipids than did most nonmammals when expressed per gram of wet lung mass (g WL). However, when expressed per unit of respiratory surface area (cm² RSA), most nonmammalian species tested had six- to 30-fold greater amounts of surfactant lipid than did mammals. Phosphatidylcholine was the predominant PL, and only the minor phospholipids varied between species. We observed surfactant to change in composition from a mixture of very high CHOL/very low DSP in primitive air-breathing actinopterygiian fish, to intermediate CHOL/intermediate DSP in derived lung, flsh and amphibians, to low CHOL/high DSP in reptiles and mammals. We have also observed smaller changes in surfactant composition between species and within individuals, which correlated with dfferences in body temperature, lifestyle, and lung maturity as well as with structure and function of the lung. We determined the pressure required to open a collapsed lung both before and after the removal of surfactant in several species of each vertebrate group and found in virtually all cases that surfactant functioned to lower the lung opening pressure. These findings were consistent with the surfactant functioning as an antiglue in these vertebrate groups. Possibly, acting as an antiglue represents the primitive function of surfactant. On the basis of the two apparently distinct types of surfactant composition, a high CHOL/ low DSP mixture in the primitive air-breathing fish and a mixture of low to intermediate CHOL and intermediate to high DSP levels in the derived sarcopterygiians and the tetrapods, we suggest that the CHOL -enriched surfactant may represent the primitive surfactant, or protosurfactant.

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Janna L. Morrison

University of South Australia

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Erin V. McGillick

University of South Australia

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I. Caroline McMillen

University of South Australia

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Fred Possmayer

University of Western Ontario

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Allan W. Smits

University of Texas at Arlington

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Ruud A. W. Veldhuizen

University of Western Ontario

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