Cells of Epithelial Lineage Are Present in Blood, Engraft the Bronchial Epithelium, and Are Increased in Human Lung Transplantation (original) (raw)
Related papers
Detection of bone marrow–derived lung epithelial cells
Experimental Hematology, 2010
Studies on the ability of bone marrowLderived cells to adopt the morphology and protein expression pattern of epithelial cells in vivo have expanded rapidly during the last decade, and hundreds of publications report that bone marrowLderived cells can become epithelial cells of multiple organs, including lung, liver, gastrointestinal tract, skin, pancreas, and others. In this review, we critically evaluate the literature related to engraftment of bone marrow-derived cells as epithelial cells in the lung. More than 40 articles focused on whether bone marrow cells can differentiate into lung epithelial cells have been published, nearly all of which claim to identify marrow-derived epithelial cells. A few investigations have concluded that no such cells are present and that the phenomenon of marrowderived epithelial cells is based on detection artifacts. Here we discuss the problems that exist in published articles identifying marrow-derived epithelial cells, and propose standards for detection methods that provide the most definitive data. Identification of bone mar-rowLderived epithelial cells requires reliable and sensitive techniques for their detection, which must include cell identification based on the presence of an epithelial marker and the absence of blood cell markers as well as a marker for donor bone marrow origin. In order for these studies to be rigorous, they must also use approaches to rule out cell overlap by microscopy or single-cell isolation. Once these stringent criteria for identification of marrow-derived epithelial cells are used universally, then the field can move forward to address the critical questions about which bone marrowLderived cells are responsible for engraftment as epithelial cells, the mechanisms by which this occurs, whether these cells play a role in normal tissue repair, and whether specific cell subsets can be used for therapeutic benefit. Ó
Failure of Bone Marrow to Reconstitute Lung Epithelium
American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology, 2005
A new paradigm of epithelial tissue reconstitution has been suggested whereby circulating cells derived from bone marrow contribute to a variety of epithelial cell types. With regard to the lung, several recent reports have used immunofluorescence microscopy to demonstrate engraftment of bone marrow-derived cells as type II pneumocytes, the endogenous progenitors of the lung alveolus. We show here that immunofluorescence microscopy, as has been used in previous reports, cannot reliably identify rare engrafted cells in lung tissue sections after transplantation of bone marrow cells or purified hematopoietic stem cells tracked with ubiquitous labels. We have employed a lineage-specific reporter system based on transgenic mice that express the GFP reporter gene only in lung epithelial cells (surfactant protein C-GFP) to assay for engrafted cells by flow cytometry, histology, and molecular methods. Using this approach to evaluate transplant recipients, including those subjected to bleomycin-induced lung injury, we demonstrate that when autofluorescence, dead cells, and contaminating blood cells are excluded from analysis, there is no detectable reconstitution of lung alveolar epithelial cells by unfractionated bone marrow cells or purified hematopoietic stem cells.
Novel flow cytometry approach to identify bronchial epithelial cells from healthy human airways
Scientific Reports
To date, a flow cytometric method to identify HBEC recovered from lower human airway samples is unavailable. In this study we present a flow cytometric method identifying HBEC as CD45 negative, EpCAM/pan-cytokeratin (pan-CK) double-positive population after excluding debris, doublets and dead cells from the analysis. For validation, the HBEC panel was applied to primary HBEC resulting in 98.6% of live cells. In healthy volunteers, HBEC recovered from BAL (2.3% of live cells), BW (32.5%) and bronchial brushing samples (88.9%) correlated significantly (p = 0.0001) with the manual microscopy counts with an overall Pearson correlation of 0.96 across the three sample types. We therefore have developed, validated, and applied a flow cytometric method that will be useful to interrogate the role of the respiratory epithelium in multiple lung diseases.
Primary airway epithelial cell culture from lung transplant recipients
European Respiratory Journal, 2005
Long-term survival in lung transplantation is limited by the development of obliterative bronchiolitis, a condition characterised by inflammation, epithelial injury, fibroproliferation and obliteration of bronchioles leading to airflow obstruction. To investigate the role of the bronchial epithelium in the pathogenesis of obliterative bronchiolitis the current study aimed to establish primary bronchial epithelial cell cultures (PBEC) from lung allografts. Four to six bronchial brushings were obtained from sub-segmental bronchi of lung allografts. Cells were seeded onto collagen-coated plates and grown to confluence in bronchial epithelial growth medium. Bronchial brushings (n533) were obtained from 27 patients. PBECs were grown to confluence from 12 out of 33 (39%) brushings. Failure to reach confluence was due to early innate infection. Bacteria were usually isolated from both bronchoalveolar lavage and culture media, but a separate population was identified in culture media only. Primary culture of bronchial epithelial cells from lung transplant recipients is feasible, despite a high rate of early, patient-derived infection. Latent infection of the allograft, identified only by bronchial brushings, may itself be a persistent stimulus for epithelial injury. This technique facilitates future mechanistic studies of airway epithelial responses in the pathogenesis of obliterative bronchiolitis.
Bone marrow-derived cells as progenitors of lung alveolar epithelium
Development, 2001
We assessed the capacity of plastic-adherent cultured bone marrow cells to serve as precursors of differentiated parenchymal cells of the lung. By intravenously delivering lacZ-labeled cells into wild-type recipient mice after bleomycin-induced lung injury, we detected marrow-derived cells engrafted in recipient lung parenchyma as cells with the morphological and molecular phenotype of type I pneumocytes of the alveolar epithelium. At no time after marrow cell injection, did we detect any engraftment as type II pneumocytes. In addition, we found that cultured and fresh aspirates of bone marrow cells can express the type I pneumocyte markers, T1α and aquaporin-5. These observations challenge the current belief that adult alveolar type I epithelial cells invariably arise from local precursor cells and raise the possibility of using injected marrow-derived cells for therapy of lung diseases characterized by extensive alveolar damage.
American Journal of Pathology, 2003
Chimerism on the parenchymal level has been shown for several human allografts, including liver, heart, and kidney, with the integrated recipient-derived cells most likely originating from multipotent bone marrow precursors. We investigated whether chimerism also occurs within epithelial structures of the lung. For this purpose archival tissue biopsies from seven explanted human lung allografts were obtained. We performed laser microdissection of the target structures with subsequent short tandem repeat analysis to detect chimerism within the isolated cells. We found integration of recipient-derived cells in the bronchial epithelium, in type II pneumocytes and in seromucous glands lying adjacent to larger bronchi in all lung allografts studied. Quantitative analysis revealed that the epithelial structures displaying signs of chronic injury, such as squamous metaplasia, showed a markedly higher degree of chimerism (24% versus 9.5%). We therefore conclude that in human lungs, epithelial chimerism occurs at least within bronchi, type II pneumocytes, and seromucous peribronchial glands. Although a bone marrow origin of immigrating host-derived stem cells has been suggested by previous studies in rodents, analysis of lung biopsies from bone marrow-transplanted patients (n ؍ 3) could not prove such delineation in this study. The observation of an enhanced integration of recipient cells into chronically damaged epithelial structures suggests that extrapulmonary precursor cells are able to contribute to pulmonary regeneration.
Experimental Lung Research, 2018
Purpose: To study and isolate lung cells by flow cytometry, enzymatic digestion and generation of single cell suspensions is required. This significantly influences expression of cellular epitopes and protocols need to be adapted for the best isolation and subsequent analysis of specific cellular subsets. Materials and Methods: We optimized protocols for the simultaneous isolation and characterization of specific human and murine lung cell types. For alveolar epithelial cells (AEC), a primarily dispase based digestion method and for leukocytes, a primarily collagenase based technique was adapted. Protocols were applied in parallel in either single experimental mice or human lung specimens. Results: Optimized dispase/DNase digestion yielded a high percentage of Epcam+CD45-CD31-AEC as assessed by flow cytometry. Epcam+CD45-CD3-CD11b-CD11c-CD16/32-CD19-CD31-F4/80-AEC were readily sortable with high purity and typical morphology and function upon in vitro stimulation with lipopolysaccharide or respiratory-syncytial-virus (RSV) infection. To analyze lung leukocytes, specimens were digested with an adapted collagenase/DNase protocol yielding high percentages of viable leukocytes with typical morphology, function, and preserved subset specific leukocyte markers. Both protocols could be applied simultaneously in a single experimental mouse post mortem. Application of both digestion methods in primary human lung specimens yielded similar results with high proportions of Epcam+CD45-human AEC after dispase/DNase digestion and preservation of human T cell epitopes after collagenase/DNase digestion. Conclusion: The here described protocols were optimized for the simple and efficient isolation of murine and human lung cells. In contrast to previously described techniques, they permit simultaneous in-depth characterization of pulmonary epithelial cells and leukocyte subsets such as T helper, cytotoxic T, and B cells from one sample. As such, they may help to comprehensively and sustainably characterize murine and human lung specimens and facilitate studies on the role of lung immune cells in different respiratory pathologies.
Primary Human Bronchial Epithelial Cells Grown from Explants
Journal of Visualized Experiments, 2010
Human bronchial epithelial cells are needed for cell models of disease and to investigate the effect of excipients and pharmacologic agents on the function and structure of human epithelial cells. Here we describe in detail the method of growing bronchial epithelial cells from bronchial airway tissue that is harvested by the surgeon at the times of lung surgery (e.g. lung cancer or lung volume reduction surgery). With ethics approval and informed consent, the surgeon takes what is needed for pathology and provides us with a bronchial portion that is remote from the diseased areas. The tissue is then used as a source of explants that can be used for growing primary bronchial epithelial cells in culture. Bronchial segments about 0.5-1cm long and ≤1cm in diameter are rinsed with cold EBSS and excess parenchymal tissue is removed. Segments are cut open and minced into 2-3mm 3 pieces of tissue. The pieces are used as a source of primary cells. After coating 100mm culture plates for 1-2 hr with a combination of collagen (30 μg/ml), fibronectin (10 μg/ml), and BSA (10 μg/ml), the plates are scratched in 4-5 areas and tissue pieces are placed in the scratched areas, then culture medium (DMEM/Ham F-12 with additives) suitable for epithelial cell growth is added and plates are placed in an incubator at 37°C in 5% CO2 humidified air. The culture medium is changed every 3-4 days. The epithelial cells grow from the pieces forming about 1.5 cm diameter rings in 3-4 weeks. Explants can be re-used up to 6 times by moving them into new pre-coated plates. Cells are lifted using trypsin/EDTA, pooled, counted, and re-plated in T75 Cell Bind flasks to increase their numbers. T75 flasks seeded with 2-3 million cells grow to 80% confluence in 4 weeks. Expanded primary human epithelial cells can be cultured and allowed to differentiate on air-liquid interface. Methods described here provide an abundant source of human bronchial epithelial cells from freshly isolated tissues and allow for studying these cells as models of disease and for pharmacology and toxicology screening.