CD44high alveolar type II cells show stem cell properties during steady-state alveolar homeostasis

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Abstract

The alveolar epithelium is composed of type I cells covering most of the gas-blood exchange surface and type II cells secreting surfactant that lowers surface tension of alveoli to prevent alveolar collapse. Here, we have identified a subgroup of type II cells expressing a higher level of cell surface molecule CD44 (CD44high type II cells) that composed ~3% of total type II cells in 5-10-wk-old mice. These cells were preferentially apposed to lung capillaries. They displayed a higher proliferation rate and augmented differentiation capacity into type I cells and the ability to form alveolar organoids compared with CD44low type II cells. Moreover, in aged mice, 18-24 mo old, the percentage of CD44high type II cells among all type II cells was increased, but these cells showed decreased progenitor properties. Thus CD44high type II cells likely represent a type II cell subpopulation important for constitutive regulation of alveolar homeostasis.

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Chen, Q., Kumar, V. S., Finn, J., Jiang, D., Liang, J., Zhao, Y. yang, & Liu, Y. (2017). CD44high alveolar type II cells show stem cell properties during steady-state alveolar homeostasis. American Journal of Physiology - Lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology, 313(1), L41–L51. https://doi.org/10.1152/ajplung.00564.2016

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