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Airway epithelial homeostasis and planar cell polarity signaling depend on multiciliated cell differentiation
Eszter K. Vladar, Jayakar V. Nayak, Carlos E. Milla, Jeffrey D. Axelrod
Eszter K. Vladar, Jayakar V. Nayak, Carlos E. Milla, Jeffrey D. Axelrod
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Research Article Cell biology Pulmonology

Airway epithelial homeostasis and planar cell polarity signaling depend on multiciliated cell differentiation

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Abstract

Motile airway cilia that propel contaminants out of the lung are oriented in a common direction by planar cell polarity (PCP) signaling, which localizes PCP protein complexes to opposite cell sides throughout the epithelium to orient cytoskeletal remodeling. In airway epithelia, PCP is determined in a 2-phase process. First, cell-cell communication via PCP complexes polarizes all cells with respect to the proximal-distal tissue axis. Second, during ciliogenesis, multiciliated cells (MCCs) undergo cytoskeletal remodeling to orient their cilia in the proximal direction. The second phase not only directs cilium polarization, but also consolidates polarization across the epithelium. Here, we demonstrate that in airway epithelia, PCP depends on MCC differentiation. PCP mutant epithelia have misaligned cilia, and also display defective barrier function and regeneration, indicating that PCP regulates multiple aspects of airway epithelial homeostasis. In humans, MCCs are often sparse in chronic inflammatory diseases, and these airways exhibit PCP dysfunction. The presence of insufficient MCCs impairs mucociliary clearance in part by disrupting PCP-driven polarization of the epithelium. Consistent with defective PCP, barrier function and regeneration are also disrupted. Pharmacological stimulation of MCC differentiation restores PCP and reverses these defects, suggesting its potential for broad therapeutic benefit in chronic inflammatory disease.

Authors

Eszter K. Vladar, Jayakar V. Nayak, Carlos E. Milla, Jeffrey D. Axelrod

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Figure 3

Prickle2 expression and localization depends on multiciliated cell differentiation.

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Prickle2 expression and localization depends on multiciliated cell diffe...
(A) Mouse tracheal epithelial cells (MTECs) infected with lentivirus containing scrambled sequence or Cep83 shRNA at day 4 of culture and labeled at air-liquid interface (ALI)+14 days with Prickle2 (green), γ-tubulin (cilia, red), and Ecad (blue) antibodies show that Prickle2 localization is unaffected in Cep83-depleted multiciliated cells (MCCs) that fail to dock their basal bodies. (B) MTECs cultured submerged for 5+14 days (control MTECs were cultured submerged for 5, then at ALI for 14 days) and labeled with Prickle2 (green), acetylated α-tubulin (cilia, red), and Ecad (blue) antibodies show that Prickle2 is absent when MCC differentiation is blocked. (C) Foxj1+/– and Foxj1–/– adult mouse tracheas whole-mount labeled with Prickle2 (green), acetylated α-tubulin (cilia, red), and Ecad (blue) show that Prickle2 is absent in Foxj1–/– cells. Images are representative of n = 3 Foxj1–/– mice and littermate controls. (D) Luciferase reporter assay using the human PRICKLE2 promoter (left) in 293T/17 cells shows that it is responsive to MCC transcriptional regulators compared to vector-only control. Luciferase reporter assay using a human PRICKLE2 genomic fragment (right) with predicted MYB and RFX3 binding sites shows that it is responsive to MCC transcriptional regulators compared with vector-only control. Assays were performed in triplicate with n = 3 transfections per reporter construct. Box and whisker plots show the minimum, lower quartile, median, upper quartile, and maximum values. Two-tailed Student’s t test for each transcriptional regulator compared with vector-only transfection; *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01. Scale bars: 10 μm (A and B), 25 μm (C). Images in A and B are representative of n = 3 lentiviral infections or drug treatments of MTECs.

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ISSN 2379-3708

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