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Wild Type Mesenchymal Cells Contribute to the Lung Pathology of Lymphangioleiomyomatosis

Lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM) is a rare disease leading to lungs cysts and progressive respiratory failure. Cells of unknown origin accumulate in the lungs forming nodules and eventually resulting in lung cysts. These LAM cells are described as clonal with bi-allelic mutations in TSC-2 resulting in...

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Autores principales: Clements, Debbie, Dongre, Arundhati, Krymskaya, Vera P., Johnson, Simon R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4433241/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25978616
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0126025
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author Clements, Debbie
Dongre, Arundhati
Krymskaya, Vera P.
Johnson, Simon R.
author_facet Clements, Debbie
Dongre, Arundhati
Krymskaya, Vera P.
Johnson, Simon R.
author_sort Clements, Debbie
collection PubMed
description Lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM) is a rare disease leading to lungs cysts and progressive respiratory failure. Cells of unknown origin accumulate in the lungs forming nodules and eventually resulting in lung cysts. These LAM cells are described as clonal with bi-allelic mutations in TSC-2 resulting in constitutive mTOR activation. However LAM nodules are heterogeneous structures containing cells of different phenotypes; we investigated whether recruited wild type cells were also present alongside mutation bearing cells. Cells were isolated from LAM lung tissue, cultured and characterised using microscopy, immunocytochemistry and western blotting. Fibroblast-like cells were identified in lung tissue using immunohistochemical markers. Fibroblast chemotaxis toward LAM cells was examined using migration assays and 3D cell culture. Fibroblast-like cells were obtained from LAM lungs: these cells had fibroblast-like morphology, actin stress fibres, full length tuberin protein and suppressible ribosomal protein S6 activity suggesting functional TSC-1/2 protein. Fibroblast Activation Protein, Fibroblast Specific Protein/S100A4 and Fibroblast Surface Protein all stained subsets of cells within LAM nodules from multiple donors. In a mouse model of LAM, tuberin positive host derived cells were also present within lung nodules of xenografted TSC-2 null cells. In vitro, LAM 621-101 cells and fibroblasts formed spontaneous aggregates over three days in 3D co-cultures. Fibroblast chemotaxis was enhanced two fold by LAM 621-101 conditioned medium (p=0.05), which was partially dependent upon LAM cell derived CXCL12. Further, LAM cell conditioned medium also halved fibroblast apoptosis under serum free conditions (p=0.03). Our findings suggest that LAM nodules contain a significant population of fibroblast-like cells. Analogous to cancer associated fibroblasts, these cells may provide a permissive environment for LAM cell growth and contribute to the lung pathology of LAM lung disease.
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spelling pubmed-44332412015-05-27 Wild Type Mesenchymal Cells Contribute to the Lung Pathology of Lymphangioleiomyomatosis Clements, Debbie Dongre, Arundhati Krymskaya, Vera P. Johnson, Simon R. PLoS One Research Article Lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM) is a rare disease leading to lungs cysts and progressive respiratory failure. Cells of unknown origin accumulate in the lungs forming nodules and eventually resulting in lung cysts. These LAM cells are described as clonal with bi-allelic mutations in TSC-2 resulting in constitutive mTOR activation. However LAM nodules are heterogeneous structures containing cells of different phenotypes; we investigated whether recruited wild type cells were also present alongside mutation bearing cells. Cells were isolated from LAM lung tissue, cultured and characterised using microscopy, immunocytochemistry and western blotting. Fibroblast-like cells were identified in lung tissue using immunohistochemical markers. Fibroblast chemotaxis toward LAM cells was examined using migration assays and 3D cell culture. Fibroblast-like cells were obtained from LAM lungs: these cells had fibroblast-like morphology, actin stress fibres, full length tuberin protein and suppressible ribosomal protein S6 activity suggesting functional TSC-1/2 protein. Fibroblast Activation Protein, Fibroblast Specific Protein/S100A4 and Fibroblast Surface Protein all stained subsets of cells within LAM nodules from multiple donors. In a mouse model of LAM, tuberin positive host derived cells were also present within lung nodules of xenografted TSC-2 null cells. In vitro, LAM 621-101 cells and fibroblasts formed spontaneous aggregates over three days in 3D co-cultures. Fibroblast chemotaxis was enhanced two fold by LAM 621-101 conditioned medium (p=0.05), which was partially dependent upon LAM cell derived CXCL12. Further, LAM cell conditioned medium also halved fibroblast apoptosis under serum free conditions (p=0.03). Our findings suggest that LAM nodules contain a significant population of fibroblast-like cells. Analogous to cancer associated fibroblasts, these cells may provide a permissive environment for LAM cell growth and contribute to the lung pathology of LAM lung disease. Public Library of Science 2015-05-15 /pmc/articles/PMC4433241/ /pubmed/25978616 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0126025 Text en © 2015 Clements et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Clements, Debbie
Dongre, Arundhati
Krymskaya, Vera P.
Johnson, Simon R.
Wild Type Mesenchymal Cells Contribute to the Lung Pathology of Lymphangioleiomyomatosis
title Wild Type Mesenchymal Cells Contribute to the Lung Pathology of Lymphangioleiomyomatosis
title_full Wild Type Mesenchymal Cells Contribute to the Lung Pathology of Lymphangioleiomyomatosis
title_fullStr Wild Type Mesenchymal Cells Contribute to the Lung Pathology of Lymphangioleiomyomatosis
title_full_unstemmed Wild Type Mesenchymal Cells Contribute to the Lung Pathology of Lymphangioleiomyomatosis
title_short Wild Type Mesenchymal Cells Contribute to the Lung Pathology of Lymphangioleiomyomatosis
title_sort wild type mesenchymal cells contribute to the lung pathology of lymphangioleiomyomatosis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4433241/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25978616
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0126025
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