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Human Airway Basal Cells Undergo Reversible Squamous Differentiation and Reshape Innate Immunity.

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Histological and lineage immunofluorescence examination herein revealed that healthy conducting airways of humans and animals harbor sporadic poorly differentiated epithelial patches mostly in the dorsal non-cartilage regions that remarkably manifest… Click to show full abstract

Histological and lineage immunofluorescence examination herein revealed that healthy conducting airways of humans and animals harbor sporadic poorly differentiated epithelial patches mostly in the dorsal non-cartilage regions that remarkably manifest squamous differentiation. In vitro analysis demonstrated that this squamous phenotype is not due to intrinsic functional change in underlying airway basal cells. Rather it is a reversible physiological response to persistent Wnt signaling stimulation during de novo differentiation. Squamous epithelial cells have elevated gene signatures of glucose uptake and cellular glycolysis. Inhibition of glycolysis or decrease in glucose availability suppresses Wnt-induced squamous epithelial differentiation. Compared to pseudostratified airway epithelial cells, a cascade of mucosal protective functions is impaired in squamous epithelial cells, featuring increased epithelial permeability, spontaneous epithelial unjamming, and enhanced inflammatory responses. Our study raises the possibility that the squamous differentiation naturally occurring in healthy airways identified herein may represent "vulnerable spots" within the airway mucosa that are sensitive to damage and inflammation when confronted by infection or injury. Squamous metaplasia and hyperplasia are a hallmark of many airway diseases, thereby expanding these areas of vulnerability with potential pathological consequences. Thus, investigation of physiological and reversible squamous differentiation from healthy airway basal cells may provide critical knowledge to understand pathogenic squamous remodeling, which is often non-reversible, progressive, and hyperinflammatory.

Keywords: basal cells; airway basal; reversible squamous; squamous differentiation; differentiation; squamous epithelial

Journal Title: American journal of respiratory cell and molecular biology
Year Published: 2023

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