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Investigating factors governing cell fate decisions in respiratory epithelium

The maintenance of the airway/respiratory epithelium during adult homeostasis and repair and its construction during embryonic development require tightly regulated cell fate decisions. This regulation takes the form of complex transcription factor and signalling cascades, much of which are unknown, particularly in human lung development. Multiciliogenesis describes the process of specification/differentiation of airway epithelial progenitors/stem cells into mature multiciliated cells (MCCs). Here, I have identified 2 novel transcription factors, Fank1 and Jazf1 which form part of the transcription factor cascade regulating multiciliogenesis in adult and embryonic mouse tracheas. Mouse tracheal epithelium is representative of epithelium lining the entire human airway and it is possible that we will also be able to extrapolate these findings to the human airway. It is not until we fully understand the regulation of multiciliogenesis that it will be possible to look at ways of pushing basal cells towards a MCC fate for purposes of cell replacement therapy, for example in patients with mucociliary disease. As well as exploring cell fate decisions in the mouse upper airway epithelium using embryonic tracheal explants and mouse tracheal epithelial cell (MTEC) cultures, I have also explored the regulation of cell fate decisions in distal human lung epithelium at the pseudoglandular stage of development. At this stage SOX9+ distal tip cells are self-renewing and multipotent and give rise to SOX2+ stalk descendents, which differentiate into airway epithelium. The regulation of SOX9+ lung tip cell multipotency and migration of SOX2+ stalk descendents during human lung development is poorly understood. I have compared human tip (SOX9+) versus stalk (SOX2+) transcriptomes using gene ontology (GO), which has highlighted some key signalling pathways enriched in tip cells which could be important in maintaining distal tip cell multipotency. These pathways have been utilised in optimising conditions for propagating self-renewing tip-derived organoids. These organoids have the potential to be differentiated into bronchiolar and alveolar fates and as such are an invaluable research tool for studying human lung epithelial development, whilst minimising the use of human embryos and its associated ethical implications. I have also performed human tip versus mouse tip transcriptome GO analysis which highlights that although there are many similarities, there are also differences between human and mouse lung epithelium development, emphasising the need for research on human tissue.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:753423
Date January 2018
CreatorsJohnson, Jo-Anne
ContributorsRawlins, Emma
PublisherUniversity of Cambridge
Source SetsEthos UK
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation
Sourcehttps://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/278966

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