Developmental lung biology is a field that has the potential for significant human impact: lung disease at the extremes of age continues to cause major morbidity and mortality worldwide. Understanding how the lung develops holds the promise that investigators can use this knowledge to aid lung repair and regeneration. In the decade since the “molecular embryology” of the lung was first comprehensively reviewed, new challenges have emerged—and it is on these that we focus the current review. Firstly, there is a critical need to understand the progenitor cell biology of the lung in order to exploit the potential of stem cells for the treatment of lung disease. Secondly, the current familiar descriptions of lung morphogenesis governed by growth and transcription factors need to be elaborated upon with the reinclusion and reconsideration of other factors, such as mechanics, in lung growth. Thirdly, efforts to parse the finer detail of lung bud signaling may need to be combined with broader consideration of overarching mechanisms that may be therapeutically easier to target: in this arena, we advance the proposal that looking at the lung in general (and branching in particular) in terms of clocks may yield unexpected benefits.
Developing rat lung lipofibroblasts express leptin beginning on embryonic day (E) 17, increasing 7- to 10-fold by E20. Leptin and its receptor are expressed mutually exclusively by fetal lung fibroblasts and type II cells, suggesting a paracrine signaling “loop.” This hypothesized mechanism is supported by the following experimental data: 1) leptin stimulates the de novo synthesis of surfactant phospholipid by both fetal rat type II cells (400% · 100 ng−1 · ml−1 · 24 h−1) and adult human airway epithelial cells (85% · 100 ng−1 · 24 h−1); 2) leptin is secreted by lipofibroblasts in amounts that stimulate type II cell surfactant phospholipid synthesis in vitro; 3) epithelial cell secretions such as parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP), PGE2, and dexamethasone stimulate leptin expression by fetal rat lung fibroblasts; 4) PTHrP or leptin stimulate the de novo synthesis of surfactant phospholipid (2- to 2.5-fold/24 h) and the expression of surfactant protein B (SP-B; >25-fold/24 h) by fetal rat lung explants, an effect that is blocked by a leptin antibody; and 5) a PTHrP receptor antagonist inhibits the expression of leptin mRNA by explants but does not inhibit leptin stimulation of surfactant phospholipid or SP-B expression, indicating that PTHrP paracrine stimulation of type II cell maturation requires leptin expression by lipofibroblasts. This is the first demonstration of a paracrine loop that functionally cooperates to induce alveolar acinar lung development.
Functional maturation of pulmonary alveolar epithelial cells is crucial for extrauterine survival. Mechanical distension and mesenchymal-epithelial interactions play important roles in this process. We hypothesized that mechanical stretch simulating fetal breathing movements is an important regulator of pulmonary epithelial cell differentiation. Using a Flexercell Strain Unit, we analyzed effects of stretch on primary cultures of type II cells and cocultures of epithelial and mesenchymal cells isolated from fetal rat lungs during late development. Cyclic stretch of isolated type II cells increased surfactant protein (SP) C mRNA expression by 150 +/- 30% over controls (P < 0.02) on gestational day 18 and by 130 +/- 30% on day 19 (P < 0.03). Stretch of cocultures with fibroblasts increased SP-C expression on days 18 and 19 by 170 +/- 40 and 270 +/- 40%, respectively, compared with unstretched cocultures. On day 19, stretch of isolated type II cells increased SP-B mRNA expression by 50% (P < 0.003). Unlike SP-C, addition of fibroblasts did not produce significant additional effects on SP-B mRNA levels. Under these conditions, we observed only modest increases in cellular immunoreactive SP-B, but secreted saturated phosphatidylcholine rose by 40% (P < 0.002). These results indicate that cyclic stretch promotes developmentally timed differentiation of fetal type II cells, as a direct effect on epithelial cell function and via mesenchymal-epithelial interactions. Expression of the SP-C gene appears to be highly responsive to mechanical stimulation.
We tested the hypothesis that in vitro nicotine exposure disrupts specific epithelial-mesenchymal paracrine signaling pathways and results in pulmonary interstitial lipofibroblast (LIF)-to-myofibroblast (MYF) transdifferentiation, resulting in altered pulmonary development and function. Studies were done to determine whether nicotine induces LIF-to-MYF transdifferentiation and to elucidate underlying molecular mechanism(s) involved and to determine whether nicotine-induced LIF-to-MYF transdifferentiation could be prevented by stimulating specific alveolar interstitial fibroblast lipogenic pathway. WI38 cells, a human embryonic pulmonary fibroblast cell line, were treated with nicotine with or without specific agonists of alveolar fibroblast lipogenic pathway, PTHrP, DBcAMP, or the potent PPAR␥ stimulant rosiglitazone (RGZ) for 7 days. Expression of key lipogenic and myogenic markers was examined by RT-PCR, Western hybridization, and immunohistochemistry. The effect of nicotine on triglyceride uptake by WI38 cells and PTHrP binding to its receptor was also determined. Finally, the effect of transfecting WI38 cells with a PPAR␥ expression vector on nicotine-induced LIF-to-MYF transdifferentiation was determined. Nicotine treatment resulted in significantly decreased expression of lipogenic and increased expression of myogenic markers in a dose-dependent manner, indicating nicotine-induced LIF-to-MYF transdifferentiation. This was accompanied by decreased PTHrP receptor binding to its receptor. The nicotine-induced LIF-to-MYF transdifferentiation was completely prevented by concomitant treatment with PTHrP, DBcAMP, RGZ, and by transiently overexpressing PPAR␥. Our data suggest nicotine induces alveolar LIF-to-MYF transdifferentiation through a mechanism involving downregulation of lipogenic PTHrP-mediated, cAMP-dependent PKA signaling pathway, which can be prevented using specific molecular targets. Potential therapeutic implications of these observations against in utero nicotine-induced lung injury remain to be tested. chronic lung disease; lipofibroblast; myofibroblast; peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor ␥
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