Sox9 and Lef1 Regulate the Fate and Behavior of Airway Glandular Progenitors in Response to Injury

Author:

Ievlev Vitaly1,Jensen-Cody Chandler C1,Lynch Thomas J1,Pai Albert C2,Park Soo1,Shahin Weam1,Wang Kai3,Parekh Kalpaj R2,Engelhardt John F1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, University of Iowa , Iowa City, IA , USA

2. Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics , Iowa City, IA , USA

3. Department of Biostatistics, University of Iowa College of Public Health , Iowa City, IA , USA

Abstract

Abstract Cartilaginous airways of larger mammals and the mouse trachea contain at least 3 well-established stem cell compartments, including basal cells of the surface airway epithelium (SAE) and ductal and myoepithelial cells of the submucosal glands (SMG). Here we demonstrate that glandular Sox9-expressing progenitors capable of SAE repair decline with age in mice. Notably, Sox9-lineage glandular progenitors produced basal and ciliated cells in the SAE, but failed to produce secretory cells. Lef1 was required for glandular Sox9 lineage contribution to SAE repair, and its deletion significantly reduced proliferation following injury. By contrast, in vivo deletion of Sox9 enhanced proliferation of progenitors in both the SAE and SMG shortly following injury, but these progenitors failed to proliferate in vitro in the absence of Sox9, similar to that previously shown for Lef1 deletion. In cystic fibrosis ferret airways, Sox9 expression inversely correlated with Ki67 proliferative marker expression in SMG and the SAE. Using in vitro and ex vivo models, we demonstrate that Sox9 is extinguished as glandular progenitors exit ducts and proliferate on the airway surface and that Sox9 is required for migration and proper differentiation of SMG, but not surface airway, progenitors. We propose a model whereby Wnt/Lef1 and Sox9 signals differentially regulate the proliferative and migratory behavior of glandular progenitors, respectively.

Funder

NHLBI

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cell Biology,Developmental Biology,Molecular Medicine

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