Abstract
To review molecular mechanisms of lung cell activation by stretch.Published original and review articles.Positive-pressure mechanical ventilation is associated with both beneficial and harmful effects. Data indicate that mechanical ventilation can induce, or increase, lung inflammation. This effect is clearly linked to the degree of lung cell stretching. By modeling cyclic stretch in cultured cells, it has been possible to investigate the cellular pathways activated by this mechanical strain. Integrin receptors, proteins of the focal adhesion plaque, and the cytoskeleton itself participate in the multiple molecular complex that senses cyclic stretch, transforming a mechanical signal into a biological response. Several intracellular signaling pathways then are activated and eventually result in increased transcription of genes harboring "stretch-response elements" in their promoters. Among these pathways, the mitogen-activated protein kinase signaling cascade appears to be central in mediating the effects of cell stretching. Other posttranscriptional mechanisms, such as messenger RNA stabilization and the secretion of preformed mediators, also may account for the secretion of inflammatory mediators after cyclic stretch.Identification of the relevant molecular mechanisms will help in the development of novel ventilatory and pharmacologic therapeutic strategies aimed at preventing the deleterious effects of mechanical ventilation.