AI Article Synopsis

  • Epithelial cells, which help protect our body, need help from stem cells and immune cells to heal when they're hurt, especially after infections like viruses.
  • Researchers found out that special immune cells (called moDCs) help these epithelial stem cells repair and may lead to long-term health issues if not controlled.
  • They discovered a marker called GPNMB in lung cells from people with conditions like long Covid, asthma, and COPD, which might help understand and treat chronic diseases better.

Article Abstract

Epithelial injury calls for a regenerative response from a coordinated network of epithelial stem cells and immune cells. Defining this network is key to preserving the repair process for acute resolution, but also for preventing a remodeling process with chronic dysfunction. We recently identified an immune niche for basal-epithelial stem cells using mouse models of injury after respiratory viral infection. Niche function depended on an early sentinel population of monocyte-derived dendritic cells (moDCs) that provided ligand GPNMB to basal-ESC receptor CD44 for reprogramming towards chronic lung disease. These same cell and molecular control points worked directly in mouse and human basal-ESC organoids, but the findings were not yet validated in vivo in human disease. Further, persistence of GPNMB expression in moDCs and M2-macrophages in mouse models suggested utility as a long-term disease biomarker in humans. Here we show increased expression of GPNMB localized to moDC-macrophage populations in lung tissue samples from long-term Covid, asthma, and COPD. The findings thereby provide initial evidence of a persistent and correctable pathway from acute injury to chronic disease with implications for cellular reprogramming and inflammatory memory.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11383481PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2024.08.27.24312640DOI Listing

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