Transgenic ferret models define pulmonary ionocyte diversity and function
Author:
Yuan FengORCID, Gasser Grace N.ORCID, Lemire Evan, Montoro Daniel T.ORCID, Jagadeesh Karthik, Zhang Yan, Duan Yifan, Ievlev Vitaly, Wells Kristen L.ORCID, Rotti Pavana G., Shahin WeamORCID, Winter Michael, Rosen Bradley H., Evans Idil, Cai Qian, Yu Miao, Walsh Susan A., Acevedo Michael R., Pandya Darpan N., Akurathi Vamsidhar, Dick David W.ORCID, Wadas Thaddeus J.ORCID, Joo Nam SooORCID, Wine Jeffrey J., Birket Susan, Fernandez Courtney M., Leung Hui MinORCID, Tearney Guillermo J., Verkman Alan S., Haggie Peter M., Scott Kathleen, Bartels Douglas, Meyerholz David K.ORCID, Rowe Steven M., Liu XiaomingORCID, Yan ZiyingORCID, Haber Adam L.ORCID, Sun XingshenORCID, Engelhardt John F.ORCID
Abstract
AbstractSpeciation leads to adaptive changes in organ cellular physiology and creates challenges for studying rare cell-type functions that diverge between humans and mice. Rare cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR)-rich pulmonary ionocytes exist throughout the cartilaginous airways of humans1,2, but limited presence and divergent biology in the proximal trachea of mice has prevented the use of traditional transgenic models to elucidate ionocyte functions in the airway. Here we describe the creation and use of conditional genetic ferret models to dissect pulmonary ionocyte biology and function by enabling ionocyte lineage tracing (FOXI1-CreERT2::ROSA-TG), ionocyte ablation (FOXI1-KO) and ionocyte-specific deletion of CFTR (FOXI1-CreERT2::CFTRL/L). By comparing these models with cystic fibrosis ferrets3,4, we demonstrate that ionocytes control airway surface liquid absorption, secretion, pH and mucus viscosity—leading to reduced airway surface liquid volume and impaired mucociliary clearance in cystic fibrosis, FOXI1-KO and FOXI1-CreERT2::CFTRL/L ferrets. These processes are regulated by CFTR-dependent ionocyte transport of Cl− and HCO3−. Single-cell transcriptomics and in vivo lineage tracing revealed three subtypes of pulmonary ionocytes and a FOXI1-lineage common rare cell progenitor for ionocytes, tuft cells and neuroendocrine cells during airway development. Thus, rare pulmonary ionocytes perform critical CFTR-dependent functions in the proximal airway that are hallmark features of cystic fibrosis airway disease. These studies provide a road map for using conditional genetics in the first non-rodent mammal to address gene function, cell biology and disease processes that have greater evolutionary conservation between humans and ferrets.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Multidisciplinary
Reference54 articles.
1. Montoro, D. T. et al. A revised airway epithelial hierarchy includes CFTR-expressing ionocytes. Nature 560, 319–324 (2018). 2. Plasschaert, L. W. et al. A single-cell atlas of the airway epithelium reveals the CFTR-rich pulmonary ionocyte. Nature 560, 377–381 (2018). 3. Sun, X. et al. Lung phenotype of juvenile and adult cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator-knockout ferrets. Am. J. Respir. Cell Mol. Biol. 50, 502–512 (2014). 4. Sun, X. et al. In utero and postnatal VX-770 administration rescues multiorgan disease in a ferret model of cystic fibrosis. Sci. Transl. Med. 11, eaau7531 (2019). 5. Jaenisch, R. & Mintz, B. Simian virus 40 DNA sequences in DNA of healthy adult mice derived from preimplantation blastocysts injected with viral DNA. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 71, 1250–1254 (1974).
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