4.7 Article

Derivation of Airway Basal Stem Cells from Human Pluripotent Stem Cells

Journal

CELL STEM CELL
Volume 28, Issue 1, Pages 79-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.stem.2020.09.017

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [1UL1TR001430, N01 75N92020C00005, U01TR001810, R01HL139799, R01 HL139876, R01HL122442, R01HL095993, U01HL134745, U01HL134766, U01HL148692]
  2. Cystic Fibrosis Foundation (CFF) [HAWKIN17I0]
  3. Harry Shwachman Cystic Fibrosis Clinical Investigator Award
  4. NIH CHRC [K12HD052896]
  5. Alfred and Gilda Slifka Fund [U54 DK110805]
  6. American Thoracic Society Foundation
  7. Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia Foundation
  8. Kovler Family Foundation
  9. CFF [SORSCH 13XX0, SORSCH 14XX0, R01HL146601, R01HL128370, DAVIS15XX1, DAVIS17XX0]

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The directed differentiation of human iPSCs into airway basal cells (iBCs) demonstrates the functional characteristics of airway basal cells and can be used to model characteristic changes in airway diseases.
The derivation of tissue-specific stem cells from human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) would have broad reaching implications for regenerative medicine. Here, we report the directed differentiation of human iPSCs into airway basal cells (iBCs), a population resembling the stem cell of the airway epithelium. Using a dual fluorescent reporter system (NKX2-1 (GFP);TP63 (tdTomato)), we track and purify these cells as they first emerge as developmentally immature NKX2-1 (GFP+) lung progenitors and subsequently augment a TP63 program during proximal airway epithelial patterning. In response to primary basal cell medium, NKX2-1 (GFP+)/TP63 (tdTomato+) cells display the molecular and functional phenotype of airway basal cells, including the capacity to self-renew or undergo multi-lineage differentiation in vitro and in tracheal xenografts in vivo. iBCs and their differentiated progeny model perturbations that characterize acquired and genetic airway diseases, including the mucus metaplasia of asthma, chloride channel dysfunction of cystic fibrosis, and ciliary defects of primary ciliary dyskinesia.

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