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  • Airway Basal Stem Cells in COVID-19 Exhibit a Proinflammatory Signature and Impaired Mucocililary Differentiation.

Airway Basal Stem Cells in COVID-19 Exhibit a Proinflammatory Signature and Impaired Mucocililary Differentiation.

American journal of respiratory cell and molecular biology (2023-09-12)
Kamakshi Bankoti, Wei Wang, Gaurang M Amonkar, Linjie Xiong, Jessica E Shui, Caiqi Zhao, Eric Van, Chimwemwe Mwase, Jin-Ah Park, Hongmei Mou, Yinshan Fang, Jianwen Que, Yan Bai, Paul H Lerou, Xingbin Ai
ZUSAMMENFASSUNG

Airway basal stem cells (BSCs) play a critical role in epithelial regeneration. Whether coronavirus disease (COVID-19) affects BSC function is unknown. Here, we derived BSC lines from patients with COVID-19 using tracheal aspirates (TAs) to circumvent the biosafety concerns of live-cell derivation. We show that BSCs derived from the TAs of control patients are bona fide bronchial BSCs. TA BSCs from patients with COVID-19 tested negative for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 RNA; however, these so-termed COVID-19-exposed BSCs in vitro resemble a predominant BSC subpopulation uniquely present in patients with COVID-19, manifested by a proinflammatory gene signature and STAT3 hyperactivation. Furthermore, the sustained STAT3 hyperactivation drives goblet cell differentiation of COVID-19-exposed BSCs in an air-liquid interface. Last, these phenotypes of COVID-19-exposed BSCs can be induced in control BSCs by cytokine cocktail pretreatment. Taken together, acute inflammation in COVID-19 exerts a long-term impact on mucociliary differentiation of BSCs.

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Marke
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Anti-RFX3 antibody produced in rabbit, Prestige Antibodies® Powered by Atlas Antibodies, affinity isolated antibody, buffered aqueous glycerol solution