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3.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32179507

ABSTRACT

The distal lung is a honeycomb-like collection of delicate gas exchange sacs called alveoli lined by two interspersed epithelial cell types: the cuboidal, surfactant-producing alveolar type II (AT2) and the flat, gas-exchanging alveolar type I (AT1) cell. During aging, a subset of AT2 cells expressing the canonical Wnt target gene, Axin2, function as stem cells, renewing themselves while generating new AT1 and AT2 cells. Wnt activity endows AT2 cells with proliferative competency, enabling them to respond to activating cues, and simultaneously blocks AT2 to AT1 cell transdifferentiation. Acute alveolar injury rapidly expands the AT2 stem cell pool by transiently inducing Wnt signaling activity in "bulk" AT2 cells, facilitating rapid epithelial repair. AT2 cell "stemness" is thus tightly regulated by access to Wnts, supplied by a specialized single-cell fibroblast niche during maintenance and by AT2 cells themselves during injury repair. Two non-AT2 "reserve" cell populations residing in the distal airways also contribute to alveolar repair, but only after widespread epithelial injury, when they rapidly proliferate, migrate, and differentiate into airway and alveolar lineages. Here, we review alveolar renewal and repair with a focus on the niches, rather than the stem cells, highlighting what is known about the cellular and molecular mechanisms by which they control stem cell activity in vivo.


Subject(s)
Alveolar Epithelial Cells/physiology , Regeneration , Stem Cell Niche , Aging/physiology , Animals , Humans , Wnt Signaling Pathway
4.
JCI Insight ; 2(24)2017 12 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29263307

ABSTRACT

Adaptation to air breathing after birth is dependent upon the synthesis and secretion of pulmonary surfactant by alveolar type 2 (AT2) cells. Surfactant, a complex mixture of phospholipids and proteins, is secreted into the alveolus, where it reduces collapsing forces at the air-liquid interface to maintain lung volumes during the ventilatory cycle. ABCA3, an ATP-dependent Walker domain containing transport protein, is required for surfactant synthesis and lung function at birth. Mutations in ABCA3 cause severe surfactant deficiency and respiratory failure in newborn infants. We conditionally deleted the Abca3 gene in AT2 cells in the mature mouse lung. Loss of ABCA3 caused alveolar cell injury and respiratory failure. ABCA3-related lung dysfunction was associated with surfactant deficiency, inflammation, and alveolar-capillary leak. Extensive but incomplete deletion of ABCA3 caused alveolar injury and inflammation, and it initiated proliferation of progenitor cells, restoring ABCA3 expression, lung structure, and function. M2-like macrophages were recruited to sites of AT2 cell proliferation during the regenerative process and were present in lung tissue from patients with severe lung disease caused by mutations in ABCA3. The remarkable and selective regeneration of ABCA3-sufficient AT2 progenitor cells provides plausible approaches for future correction of ABCA3 and other genetic disorders associated with surfactant deficiency and acute interstitial lung disease.


Subject(s)
ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters/physiology , Pulmonary Alveoli/pathology , Respiratory Insufficiency/genetics , ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters/deficiency , ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters/genetics , ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters/metabolism , Adult , Animals , Bronchoalveolar Lavage Fluid/chemistry , Capillary Leak Syndrome/genetics , Cell Proliferation/genetics , Gene Deletion , Humans , Macrophages, Alveolar/physiology , Mice, Knockout , Phospholipids/metabolism , Pneumonia/genetics , Pneumonia/metabolism , Pulmonary Alveoli/metabolism , Pulmonary Alveoli/physiology , Pulmonary Surfactants/metabolism , Regeneration
5.
Bioorg Med Chem ; 23(8): 1869-81, 2015 Apr 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25778768

ABSTRACT

Current FDA-approved chemotherapeutic antimetabolites elicit severe side effects that warrant their improvement; therefore, we designed compounds with mechanisms of action focusing on inhibiting DNA replication rather than targeting multiple pathways. We previously discovered that 5-(α-substituted-2-nitrobenzyloxy)methyluridine-5'-triphosphates were exquisite DNA synthesis terminators; therefore, we synthesized a library of 35 thymidine analogs and evaluated their activity using an MTT cell viability assay of MCF7 breast cancer cells chosen for their vulnerability to these nucleoside derivatives. Compound 3a, having an α-tert-butyl-2-nitro-4-(phenyl)alkynylbenzyloxy group, showed an IC50 of 9±1µM. The compound is more selective for cancer cells than for fibroblast cells compared with 5-fluorouracil. Treatment of MCF7 cells with 3a elicits the DNA damage response as indicated by phosphorylation of γ-H2A. A primer extension assay of the 5'-triphosphate of 3a revealed that 3aTP is more likely to inhibit DNA polymerase than to lead to termination events upon incorporation into the DNA replication fork.


Subject(s)
Antimetabolites, Antineoplastic/chemistry , Antimetabolites, Antineoplastic/pharmacology , DNA Replication/drug effects , Nucleic Acid Synthesis Inhibitors/chemistry , Nucleic Acid Synthesis Inhibitors/pharmacology , Thymidine/analogs & derivatives , Thymidine/pharmacology , Breast Neoplasms/drug therapy , Female , Humans , MCF-7 Cells
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