A Tracheal Aspirate-derived Airway Basal Cell Model Reveals a Proinflammatory Epithelial Defect in Congenital Diaphragmatic Hernia

  • Richard Wagner
  • , Gaurang M. Amonkar
  • , Wei Wang
  • , Jessica E. Shui
  • , Kamakshi Bankoti
  • , Wai Hei Tse
  • , Frances A. High
  • , Jill M. Zalieckas
  • , Terry L. Buchmiller
  • , Augusto Zani
  • , Richard Keijzer
  • , Patricia K. Donahoe
  • , Paul H. Lerou
  • , Xingbin Ai

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

20 Scopus citations

Abstract

Rationale: Congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH) is characterized by incomplete closure of the diaphragm and lung hypoplasia. The pathophysiology of lung defects in CDH is poorly understood. Objectives: To establish a translational model of human airway epithelium in CDH for pathogenic investigation and therapeutic testing. Methods: We developed a robust methodology of epithelial progenitor derivation from tracheal aspirates of newborns. Basal stem cells (BSCs) from patients with CDH and preterm and term non-CDH control subjects were derived and analyzed by bulk RNA sequencing, assay for transposase accessible chromatin with sequencing, and air–liquid interface differentiation. Lung sections from fetal human CDH samples and the nitrofen rat model of CDH were subjected to histological assessment of epithelial defects. Therapeutics to restore epithelial differentiation were evaluated in human epithelial cell culture and the nitrofen rat model of CDH. Measurements and Main Results: Transcriptomic and epigenetic profiling of CDH and control BSCs reveals a proinflammatory signature that is manifested by hyperactive nuclear factor kappa B and independent of severity and hernia size. In addition, CDH BSCs exhibit defective epithelial differentiation in vitro that recapitulates epithelial phenotypes found in fetal human CDH lung samples and fetal tracheas of the nitrofen rat model of CDH. Furthermore, blockade of nuclear factor kappa B hyperactivity normalizes epithelial differentiation phenotypes of human CDH BSCs in vitro and in nitrofen rat tracheas in vivo. Conclusions: Our findings have identified an underlying proinflammatory signature and BSC differentiation defects as a potential therapeutic target for airway epithelial defects in CDH.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1214-1226
Number of pages13
JournalAmerican journal of respiratory and critical care medicine
Volume207
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - May 1 2023

Keywords

  • congenital diaphragmatic hernia
  • inflammatory gene expression signature
  • lung hypoplasia
  • nitrofen rat model
  • tracheal aspirate derived lung progenitor cells

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