4.8 Article

Injury-induced pulmonary tuft cells are heterogenous, arise independent of key Type 2 cytokines, and are dispensable for dysplastic repair

Journal

ELIFE
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

eLIFE SCIENCES PUBL LTD
DOI: 10.7554/eLife.78074

Keywords

tuft cells; influenza; lung; Mouse

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01HL153539, R01HL142215, 1R01AT011676, T29IR0475, F32HL151168, F32HL140868, T32HL007185]
  2. A.P. Giannini Foundation
  3. U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs [CX001617]
  4. Fonds de Recherche du Quebec - Sante Maria

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This study found that tuft cell development in the lung does not require specific immune signals, unlike intestinal tuft cells. The expansion of tuft cells may be a general response to severe lung injury.
While the lung bears significant regenerative capacity, severe viral pneumonia can chronically impair lung function by triggering dysplastic remodeling. The connection between these enduring changes and chronic disease remains poorly understood. We recently described the emergence of tuft cells within Krt5(+) dysplastic regions after influenza injury. Using bulk and single-cell transcriptomics, we characterized and delineated multiple distinct tuft cell populations that arise following influenza clearance. Distinct from intestinal tuft cells which rely on Type 2 immune signals for their expansion, neither IL-25 nor IL-4ra signaling are required to drive tuft cell development in dysplastic/injured lungs. In addition, tuft cell expansion occurred independently of type I or type III interferon signaling. Furthermore, tuft cells were also observed upon bleomycin injury, suggesting that their development may be a general response to severe lung injury. While intestinal tuft cells promote growth and differentiation of surrounding epithelial cells, in the lungs of tuft cell deficient mice, Krt5(+) dysplasia still occurs, goblet cell production is unchanged, and there remains no appreciable contribution of Krt5(+) cells into more regionally appropriate alveolar Type 2 cells. Together, these findings highlight unexpected differences in signals necessary for murine lung tuft cell amplification and establish a framework for future elucidation of tuft cell functions in pulmonary health and disease.

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