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Mesenchymal stromal cells are readily recoverable from lung tissue, but not the alveolar space, in healthy humans

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 03:54 authored by Kenneth Sinclair, Stephanie Yerkovich, Tyrone Chen, Jonathan McQualterJonathan McQualter, Peter Hopkins, Christine Wells, Daniel Chambers
Stromal support is critical for lung homeostasis and the maintenance of an effective epithelial barrier. Despite this, previous studies have found a positive association between the number of mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) isolated from the alveolar compartment and human lung diseases associated with epithelial dysfunction. We hypothesised that bronchoalveolar lavage derived MSCs (BAL-MSCs) are dysfunctional and distinct from resident lung tissue MSCs (LT-MSCs). In this study, we comprehensively interrogated the phenotype and transcriptome of human BAL-MSCs and LT-MSCs. We found that MSCs were rarely recoverable from the alveolar space in healthy humans, but could be readily isolated from lung transplant recipients by bronchoalveolar lavage. BAL-MSCs exhibited a CD90Hi, CD73Hi, CD45Neg, CD105Lo immunophenotype and were bipotent, lacking adipogenic potential. In contrast, MSCs were readily recoverable from healthy human lung tissue and were CD90Hi or Lo, CD73Hi, CD45Neg, CD105Int and had full tri-lineage potential. Transcriptional profiling of the two populations confirmed their status as bona fide MSCs and revealed a high degree of similarity between each other and the archetypal bone-marrow MSC. 105 genes were differentially expressed; 76 of which were increased in BAL-MSCs including genes involved in fibroblast activation, extracellular matrix deposition and tissue remodelling. Finally, we found the fibroblast markers collagen 1A1 and α-smooth muscle actin were increased in BAL-MSCs. Our data suggests that in healthy humans, lung MSCs reside within the tissue, but in disease can differentiate to acquire a profibrotic phenotype and migrate from their in-tissue niche into the alveolar space.

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Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1002/stem.2419
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 10665099

Journal

Stem Cells (Durham): The International Journal of Cell Differentiation and Proliferation

Volume

34

Issue

10

Start page

2548

End page

2558

Total pages

11

Publisher

AlphaMed Press

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© AlphaMed Press 2016

Former Identifier

2006074040

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2017-06-07

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