Repository logo
 

Hypoxia promotes airway differentiation in the human lung epithelium.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Change log

Abstract

Human lungs experience dynamic oxygen tension during development. Here, we show that hypoxia directly regulates human lung epithelial cell identity using tissue-derived organoids. Fetal multipotent lung epithelial progenitors remain undifferentiated in a self-renewing culture condition under normoxia but spontaneously differentiate toward multiple airway cell types and inhibit alveolar differentiation under hypoxia. Using chemical and genetic tools, we demonstrate that hypoxia-induced airway differentiation depends on hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) activity, with HIF1α and HIF2α differentially regulating progenitor fate decisions. KLF4 and KLF5 are direct HIF targets that promote basal and secretory cell fates. Moreover, hypoxia is sufficient to convert alveolar type 2 cells derived from both human fetal and adult lungs to airway cells, including aberrant basal-like cells that exist in human fibrotic lungs. These findings reveal roles for hypoxia and HIF activity in the developing human lung epithelium and have implications for aberrant cell fate changes in pathological lungs.

Description

Journal Title

Cell Stem Cell

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1934-5909
1875-9777

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Rights and licensing

Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 4.0 International
Sponsorship
Wellcome Trust (092096/Z/10/Z)
Medical Research Council (MR/P009581/1)
Cancer Research UK (C6946/A24843)
Medical Research Council (MR/S035907/1)
Wellcome Trust (203144/A/16/Z)
MRC (MC_UU_00028/8)
Wellcome Trust (215477/Z/19/Z)
Wellcome Trust (219615/Z/19/Z)
Wellcome Trust (226653/Z/22/Z)
We acknowledge the imaging facility, bioinformatics group, and animal facility in the Gurdon Institute and the cytometry facility in the Department of Pathology. Z.D. is supported by Wellcome Trust PhD studentship (222275/Z/20/Z). E.L.R. is supported by Medical Research Council (MR/P009581/1; MR/S035907/1). J.v.d.A. is supported by Wellcome Clinical Research Career Development Fellowship (219615/Z/19/Z), Wellcome Discovery Award (226653/Z/22/Z), UKRI BBSRC Responsive Mode Research Grant (BB/X00256X/1) and core funding from MRC Mitochondrial Biology Unit (MC_UU_00028/8). J.A.N. is supported by Wellcome Senior Clinical Research Fellowship (215477/Z/19/Z) and Lister Institute Research Fellowship. Core funding to the Gurdon Institute from the Wellcome Trust (203144/Z/16/Z) and CRUK (C6946/A24843). Human embryonic and fetal material was provided by the Joint MRC/Wellcome Trust (grant# MR/X008304/1 and 226202/Z/22/Z) Human Developmental Biology Resource (http://hdbr.org).