Airway basal cells show regionally distinct potential to undergo metaplastic differentiation

Author:

Zhou Yizhuo12,Yang Ying13ORCID,Guo Lihao4,Qian Jun12,Ge Jian1,Sinner Debora5ORCID,Ding Hongxu4ORCID,Califano Andrea6ORCID,Cardoso Wellington V12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Columbia Center for Human Development, Columbia University Irving Medical Center

2. Department of Medicine, Pulmonary Allergy Critical Care, Columbia University Irving Medical Center

3. Department of Genetics and Development, Columbia University Irving Medical Center

4. Department of Pharmacy Practice and Science, College of Pharmacy, University of Arizona

5. Neonatology and Pulmonary Biology Perinatal Institute, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center and University of Cincinnati, College of Medicine

6. Departments of Systems Biology, Biochemistry & Molecular Biophysics, Biomedical Informatics, Medicine; JP Sulzberger Columbia Genome Center; Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center, Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Abstract

Basal cells are multipotent stem cells of a variety of organs, including the respiratory tract, where they are major components of the airway epithelium. However, it remains unclear how diverse basal cells are and how distinct subpopulations respond to airway challenges. Using single cell RNA-sequencing and functional approaches, we report a significant and previously underappreciated degree of heterogeneity in the basal cell pool, leading to identification of six subpopulations in the adult murine trachea. Among these, we found two major subpopulations, collectively comprising the most uncommitted of all the pools, but with distinct gene expression signatures. Notably, these occupy distinct ventral and dorsal tracheal niches and differ in their ability to self-renew and initiate a program of differentiation in response to environmental perturbations in primary cultures and in mouse injury models in vivo. We found that such heterogeneity is acquired prenatally, when the basal cell pool and local niches are still being established, and depends on the integrity of these niches, as supported by the altered basal cell phenotype of tracheal cartilage-deficient mouse mutants. Finally, we show that features that distinguish these progenitor subpopulations in murine airways are conserved in humans. Together, the data provide novel insights into the origin and impact of basal cell heterogeneity on the establishment of regionally distinct responses of the airway epithelium during injury-repair and in disease conditions.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Flow Cytometry Core and NIH/NCI Cancer Center

National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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