Expression of surfactant proteins SP-A, SP-B and the transcription
factors TTF-1 and HNF-3β was
identified by immunohistochemistry in the developing chicken. SP-B, a small
hydrophobic peptide critical for
lung function and surfactant homeostasis in mammals, was detected in the
epithelial cells of parabronchi in
embryonic chicken lung from the 15th day of incubation, prior to the onset
of the breathing movements and
was expressed at high levels in the posthatching chicken lung. SP-A, an
abundant surfactant protein
involved in innate defence of the mammalian lung, was detected in the chick
embryo in subsets of epithelial
cells in the mesobronchus, starting from d 15 and was detected in the posthatching
chicken lung. The
transcription factors hepatocyte nuclear factor 3β (HNF-3β) and
thyroid transcription factor-1 (TTF-1),
both regulators epithelial cell differentiation and gene expression in
mammalian species, were detected at the
onset of lung bud formation (d 4 of incubation) and throughout lung development.
Abundant nuclear
expression was detected in nuclei of respiratory epithelial cells of developing
bronchial tubules for both
transcription factors. In contrast to the surfactant proteins, expression
of both TTF-1 and HNF-3β
decreased markedly in posthatching chicken lung. The expression of SP-A
and SP-B in chick lung
demonstrates the conservation of surfactant proteins in vertebrates. The
temporospatial pattern of TTF-1
and HNF-3β overlaps with that of SP-A and SP-B, supporting their potential
roles in chick lung
development and demonstrating the conservation of regulatory mechanisms
contributing to gene expression
in respiratory epithelial cells in vertebrates.