Preconditioning allows engraftment of mouse and human embryonic lung cells, enabling lung repair in mice
Author(s) -
Chava Rosen,
Elias Shezen,
Anna Aronovich,
Yael Zlotnikov Klionsky,
Yasmin Yaakov,
Miri Assayag,
Inbal E. Biton,
Orna Tal,
Guy Shakhar,
H Ben-Hur,
David Shneider,
Zvi Vaknin,
Oscar Sadan,
Shmuel Evron,
Enrique Freud,
David Shoseyov,
Michael Wilschanski,
Neville Berkman,
Willem E. Fibbe,
David Hagin,
Carmit Hillel-Karniel,
Irit Milman Krentsis,
Esther Bachar-Lustig,
Yaīr Reisner
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
nature medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 19.536
H-Index - 547
eISSN - 1546-170X
pISSN - 1078-8956
DOI - 10.1038/nm.3889
Subject(s) - lung , progenitor cell , embryonic stem cell , biology , transplantation , stem cell , mesenchymal stem cell , bone marrow , immunology , pathology , microbiology and biotechnology , cancer research , medicine , gene , biochemistry
Repair of injured lungs represents a longstanding therapeutic challenge. We show that human and mouse embryonic lung tissue from the canalicular stage of development (20-22 weeks of gestation for humans, and embryonic day 15-16 (E15-E16) for mouse) are enriched with progenitors residing in distinct niches. On the basis of the marked analogy to progenitor niches in bone marrow (BM), we attempted strategies similar to BM transplantation, employing sublethal radiation to vacate lung progenitor niches and to reduce stem cell competition. Intravenous infusion of a single cell suspension of canalicular lung tissue from GFP-marked mice or human fetal donors into naphthalene-injured and irradiated syngeneic or SCID mice, respectively, induced marked long-term lung chimerism. Donor type structures or 'patches' contained epithelial, mesenchymal and endothelial cells. Transplantation of differentially labeled E16 mouse lung cells indicated that these patches were probably of clonal origin from the donor. Recipients of the single cell suspension transplant exhibited marked improvement in lung compliance and tissue damping reflecting the energy dissipation in the lung tissues. Our study provides proof of concept for lung reconstitution by canalicular-stage human lung cells after preconditioning of the pulmonary niche.
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