Age-dependent alveolar epithelial plasticity orchestrates lung homeostasis and regeneration
生物
再生(生物学)
肺
细胞生物学
肺泡上皮
平衡
上皮
干细胞
免疫学
内科学
遗传学
医学
作者
Ian J. Penkala,Derek C. Liberti,J. Pankin,Aravind Sivakumar,Madison M. Kremp,Sowmya Jayachandran,Jeremy Katzen,John P. Leach,Rebecca Windmueller,Katharine G. Stolz,Michael Morley,Apoorva Babu,Shanshan Zhou,David B. Frank,Edward E. Morrisey
Regeneration of the architecturally complex alveolar niche of the lung requires precise temporal and spatial control of epithelial cell behavior. Injury can lead to a permanent reduction in gas exchange surface area and respiratory function. Using mouse models, we show that alveolar type 1 (AT1) cell plasticity is a major and unappreciated mechanism that drives regeneration, beginning in the early postnatal period during alveolar maturation. Upon acute neonatal lung injury, AT1 cells reprogram into alveolar type 2 (AT2) cells, promoting alveolar regeneration. In contrast, the ability of AT2 cells to regenerate AT1 cells is restricted to the mature lung. Unbiased genomic assessment reveals that this previously unappreciated level of plasticity is governed by the preferential activity of Hippo signaling in the AT1 cell lineage. Thus, cellular plasticity is a temporally acquired trait of the alveolar epithelium and presents an alternative mode of tissue regeneration in the postnatal lung.