Back to Search Start Over

When Is an Alveolar Type 2 Cell an Alveolar Type 2 Cell? A Conundrum for Lung Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine

Authors :
Yuben Moodley
Michael F. Beers
Source :
American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology. 57:18-27
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
American Thoracic Society, 2017.

Abstract

Generating mature, differentiated, adult lung cells from pluripotent cells, such as induced pluripotent stem cells and embryonic stem cells, offers the hope of both generating disease-specific in vitro models and creating definitive and personalized therapies for a host of debilitating lung parenchymal and airway diseases. With the goal of advancing lung-regenerative medicine, several groups have developed and reported on protocols using defined media, coculture with mesenchymal components, or sequential treatments mimicking lung development, to obtain distal lung epithelial cells from stem cell precursors. However, there remains significant controversy about the degree of differentiation of these cells compared with their primary counterparts, coupled with a lack of consistency or uniformity in assessing the resultant phenotypes. Given the inevitable, exponential expansion of these approaches and the probable, but yet-to-emerge second and higher generation techniques to create such assets, we were prompted to pose the question, what makes a lung epithelial cell a lung epithelial cell? More specifically for this Perspective, we also posed the question, what are the minimum features that constitute an alveolar type (AT) 2 epithelial cell? In addressing this, we summarize a body of work spanning nearly five decades, amassed by a series of “lung epithelial cell biology pioneers,” which carefully describes well characterized molecular, functional, and morphological features critical for discriminately assessing an AT2 phenotype. Armed with this, we propose a series of core criteria to assist the field in confirming that cells obtained following a differentiation protocol are indeed mature and functional AT2 epithelial cells.

Details

ISSN :
15354989 and 10441549
Volume :
57
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....11387d726caf7013782ec5fe301793f3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1165/rcmb.2016-0426ps