32 research outputs found

    p53 Regulates Progenitor Cell Quiescence and Differentiation in the Airway

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    SummaryMechanisms that regulate progenitor cell quiescence and differentiation in slowly replacing tissues are not fully understood. Here, we demonstrate that the tumor suppressor p53 regulates both proliferation and differentiation of progenitors in the airway epithelium. p53 loss decreased ciliated cell differentiation and increased the self-renewal and proliferative capacity of club progenitors, increasing epithelial cell density. p53-deficient progenitors generated a pseudostratified epithelium containing basal-like cells in vitro and putative bronchioalveolar stem cells in vivo. Conversely, an additional copy of p53 increased quiescence and ciliated cell differentiation, highlighting the importance of tight regulation of p53 levels. Using single-cell RNA sequencing, we found that loss of p53 altered the molecular phenotype of progenitors and differentially modulated cell-cycle regulatory genes. Together, these findings reveal that p53 is an essential regulator of progenitor cell behavior, which shapes our understanding of stem cell quiescence during homeostasis and in cancer development

    Rare SOX2+ Airway Progenitor Cells Generate KRT5+ Cells that Repopulate Damaged Alveolar Parenchyma following Influenza Virus Infection

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    Recent studies have implicated keratin 5 (KRT5)+ cells in repopulation of damaged lung tissue following severe H1N1 influenza virus infection. However, the origins of the cells repopulating the injured alveolar region remain controversial. We sought to determine the cellular dynamics of lung repair following influenza infection and define whether nascent KRT5+ cells repopulating alveolar epithelium were derived from pre-existing alveolar or airway progenitor cells. We found that the wound-healing response begins with proliferation of SOX2+ SCGB1A1− KRT5− progenitor cells in airways. These cells generate nascent KRT5+ cells as an early response to airway injury and yield progeny that colonize damaged alveolar parenchyma. Moreover, we show that local alveolar progenitors do not contribute to nascent KRT5+ cells after injury. Repopulation of injured airway and alveolar regions leads to proximalization of distal airways by pseudostratified epithelium and of alveoli by airway-derived epithelial cells that lack the normal characteristics of mature airway or alveolar epithelium

    Coexistence of Immiscible Mixtures of Palmitoylsphingomyelin and Palmitoylceramide in Monolayers and Bilayers

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    A combination of lipid monolayer- and bilayer-based model systems has been applied to explore in detail the interactions between and organization of palmitoylsphingomyelin (pSM) and the related lipid palmitoylceramide (pCer). Langmuir balance measurements of the binary mixture reveal favorable interactions between the lipid molecules. A thermodynamically stable point is observed in the range ∼30–40 mol % pCer. The pSM monolayer undergoes hyperpolarization and condensation with small concentrations of pCer, narrowing the liquid-expanded (LE) to liquid-condensed (LC) pSM main phase transition by inducing intermolecular interactions and chain ordering. Beyond this point, the phase diagram no longer reveals the presence of the pSM-enriched phase. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) of multilamellar vesicles reveals a widening of the pSM main gel-fluid phase transition (41°C) upon pCer incorporation, with formation of a further endotherm at higher temperatures that can be deconvoluted into two components. DSC data reflect the presence of pCer-enriched domains coexisting, in different proportions, with a pSM-enriched phase. The pSM-enriched phase is no longer detected in DSC thermograms containing >30 mol % pCer. Direct domain visualization has been carried out by fluorescence techniques on both lipid model systems. Epifluorescence microscopy of mixed monolayers at low pCer content shows concentration-dependent, morphologically different pCer-enriched LC domain formation over a pSM-enriched LE phase, in which pCer content close to 5 and 30 mol % can be determined for the LE and LC phases, respectively. In addition, fluorescence confocal microscopy of giant vesicles further confirms the formation of segregated pCer-enriched lipid domains. Vesicles cannot form at >40 mol % pCer content. Altogether, the presence of at least two immiscible phase-segregated pSM-pCer mixtures of different compositions is proposed at high pSM content. A condensed phase (with domains segregated from the liquid-expanded phase) showing enhanced thermodynamic stability occurs near a compositional ratio of 2:1 (pSM/pCer). These observations become significant on the basis of the ceramide-induced microdomain aggregation and platform formation upon sphingomyelinase enzymatic activity on cellular membranes
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