Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med.,
Volume 157, Number 3, March 1998, 962-969
Clara Cell Protein (CC16) in Pleural Fluids
A Marker of Leakage through the Visceral Pleura
C.
HERMANS,
O.
LESUR,
B.
WEYNAND,
TH.
PIETERS,
M.
LAMBERT,
and
A.
BERNARD
Industrial Toxicology and Occupational Medicine Unit, Department of Pathology, Pneumology, and General Internal
Medicine Units, Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc, Catholic University of Louvain, Brussels, Belgium; and Pulmonary
Research Unit, University of Sherbrooke, Québec, Canada
Pleural fluid (PF) proteins either derive from serum by diffusion or are locally secreted within the
pleural space. Another hypothetical origin is a leakage of lung secretory proteins across the visceral
pleura. To test this hypothesis, we investigated the occurrence, sources, and determinants in PF of
CC16, a small-size and readily diffusible protein of 16 kDa secreted by bronchiolar Clara cells. CC16
concentration was determined by a sensitive latex immunoassay in serum and PF of 117 subjects (86 exudates and 31 transudates) and, for purpose of comparison, in ascites samples from another group
of 38 subjects (7 exudates and 31 transudates). CC16 was also studied in serum and PF of normal rats
and in rats with pleural exudate induced by
-naphthyl-thiourea (ANTU). The levels of CC16 in PF
and ascites were highly correlated with that in serum, suggesting a diffusional exchange across the
pleural/blood and peritoneal/blood barriers. Whereas CC16 occurs at similar levels in ascites and serum, the protein was found to be more concentrated in PF than in serum in both humans (geometric
mean in µg/L, 26.2 versus 14.6, p < 0.0001) and rats (213 versus 16.2, p < 0.001). A local synthesis of
CC16 appeared unlikely in view of the lack of CC16-immunostaining in pleura of both species. The
only plausible explanation for these findings is that CC16 in PF originates from two sources: diffusion
from plasma and a leakage from the lung into the pleural space across the semipermeable visceral
pleura. This interpretation is supported by a markedly increased leakage of CC16 in experimental exudates induced by ANTU and the finding of high CC16 concentrations in human transudates associated with congestive heart failure, two conditions wherein PF has been shown to arise from the interstitial spaces of the lung.