JCI Insight (Nov 2023)

Functional Pdgfra fibroblast heterogeneity in normal and fibrotic mouse lung

  • Carol S. Trempus,
  • Brian N. Papas,
  • Maria I. Sifre,
  • Carl D. Bortner,
  • Erica Scappini,
  • Charles J. Tucker,
  • Xin Xu,
  • Katina L. Johnson,
  • Leesa J. Deterding,
  • Jason G. Williams,
  • Dylan J. Johnson,
  • Jian-Liang Li,
  • Deloris Sutton,
  • Charan Ganta,
  • Debabrata Mahapatra,
  • Muhammad Arif,
  • Abhishek Basu,
  • Lenny Pommerolle,
  • Resat Cinar,
  • Anne K. Perl,
  • Stavros Garantziotis

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 22

Abstract

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Aberrant fibroblast function plays a key role in the pathogenesis of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, a devastating disease of unrelenting extracellular matrix deposition in response to lung injury. Platelet-derived growth factor α–positive (Pdgfra+) lipofibroblasts (LipoFBs) are essential for lung injury response and maintenance of a functional alveolar stem cell niche. Little is known about the effects of lung injury on LipoFB function. Here, we used single-cell RNA-Seq (scRNA-Seq) technology and PdgfraGFP lineage tracing to generate a transcriptomic profile of Pdgfra+ fibroblasts in normal and injured mouse lungs 14 days after bleomycin exposure, generating 11 unique transcriptomic clusters that segregated according to treatment. While normal and injured LipoFBs shared a common gene signature, injured LipoFBs acquired fibrogenic pathway activity with an attenuation of lipogenic pathways. In a 3D organoid model, injured Pdgfra+ fibroblast–supported organoids were morphologically distinct from those cultured with normal fibroblasts, and scRNA-Seq analysis suggested distinct transcriptomic changes in alveolar epithelia supported by injured Pdgfra+ fibroblasts. In summary, while LipoFBs in injured lung have not migrated from their niche and retain their lipogenic identity, they acquire a potentially reversible fibrogenic profile, which may alter the kinetics of epithelial regeneration and potentially contribute to dysregulated repair, leading to fibrosis.

Keywords