AI Article Synopsis

  • Scientists found a new way to study how human lungs can heal themselves using special cells created from human stem cells.
  • These special cells, called distal lung epithelial progenitors (DLEPs), can help repair damaged lung tissue and make important structures for lung health.
  • This discovery could help researchers create new treatments for lung diseases in the future.

Article Abstract

Although lung disease is a major cause of mortality, the mechanisms involved in human lung regeneration are unclear because of the lack of experimental models. Here we report a novel model where human pluripotent stem cell-derived expandable cell lines sharing features of airway secretory and basal cells engraft in the distal rat lung after conditioning by locoregional de-epithelialization followed by irradiation and immunosuppression. The engrafting cells, which we named distal lung epithelial progenitors (DLEPs), contributed to alveolar epithelial cells and generated 'KRT5-pods', structures involved in distal lung repair after severe injury, but only rarely to distal airways. Most strikingly, however, injury induced by the conditioning regimen was largely prevented by the engrafting DLEPs. The approach described here provides a model to study mechanisms involved in human lung regeneration, and potentially lays the foundation for the preclinical development of cell therapy to treat lung injury and disease.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10705389PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.11.28.569060DOI Listing

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