Lung disease is a major health burden accounting for one in six deaths globally 1 . The lung's large surface area is exposed to a great variety of environmental and microbial insults causing injuries to its epithelium that require a regenerative response mediated by tissue-resident stem and progenitor Lung injury activates quiescent stem and progenitor cells to regenerate alveolar structures. The sequence and coordination of transcriptional programs during this process has largely remained elusive. Using single cell RNA-seq, we first generated a whole-organ bird's-eye view on cellular dynamics and cell-cell communication networks during mouse lung regeneration from ~30,000 cells at six timepoints. We discovered an injury-specific progenitor cell state characterized by Krt8 in flat epithelial cells covering alveolar surfaces. The number of these cells peaked during fibrogenesis in independent mouse models, as well as in human acute lung injury and fibrosis. Krt8+ progenitors featured a highly distinct connectome of receptor-ligand pairs with endothelial cells, fibroblasts, and macrophages. To 'sky dive' into epithelial differentiation dynamics, we sequenced >30,000 sorted epithelial cells at 18 timepoints and computationally derived cell state trajectories that were validated by lineage tracing genetic reporter mice. Airway stem cells within the club cell lineage and alveolar type-2 cells underwent transcriptional convergence onto the same Krt8+ progenitor cell state, which later resolved by terminal differentiation into alveolar type-1 cells. We derived distinct transcriptional regulators as key switch points in this process and show that induction of TNF-alpha/NFkappaB, p53, and hypoxia driven gene expression programs precede a Sox4, Ctnnb1, and Wwtr1 driven switch towards alveolar type-1 cell fate. We show that epithelial cell plasticity can induce non-gradual transdifferentiation, involving intermediate progenitor cell states that may persist and promote disease if checkpoint signals for terminal differentiation are perturbed.
SWI/SNF and related chromatin remodeling complexes act as tissue-specific tumor suppressors and are frequently inactivated in different cancers. Although many regulatory activities of SWI/SNF have been identified using 2D cell culture, the effects of SWI/SNF alterations in more complex 3D tissues have remained poorly understood. Here we employed 3D cell culture conditions that yield transcriptomic states mirroring primary lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) specimens better than 2D culture. By analyzing spatial patterns of gene expression and DNA accessibility in 3D spheroids using single-cell RNA-seq and ATAC-seq, we find that the SWI/SNF ATPase SMARCA4 (BRG1) induces state-specific changes to DNA accessibility that influence spatially heterogeneous expression patterns and metabolism. In 3D conditions, SMARCA4 promotes accessibility for AP-1 transcription factors, including ATF3, a regulator of metabolism and repressor of NRF2 antioxidant signaling. These changes reduce expression of SLC7A11 in a distinct portion of cells, which sensitizes A549 spheroids to cell death via ferroptosis under oxidizing conditions. Consistent with these results, we find that SMARCA4 alterations are associated with derepression of NRF2 targets in human tumors independently of NRF2/KEAP1 status. Our work reveals new 3D-specific features and unanticipated spatial complexity associated with chromatin remodeling in multicellular tissues.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.