Stem Cell Reports (May 2018)

Single-Cell Transcriptomic Profiling of Pluripotent Stem Cell-Derived SCGB3A2+ Airway Epithelium

  • Katherine B. McCauley,
  • Konstantinos-Dionysios Alysandratos,
  • Anjali Jacob,
  • Finn Hawkins,
  • Ignacio S. Caballero,
  • Marall Vedaie,
  • Wenli Yang,
  • Katherine J. Slovik,
  • Michael Morley,
  • Gianni Carraro,
  • Seunghyi Kook,
  • Susan H. Guttentag,
  • Barry R. Stripp,
  • Edward E. Morrisey,
  • Darrell N. Kotton

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 5
pp. 1579 – 1595

Abstract

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Summary: Lung epithelial lineages have been difficult to maintain in pure form in vitro, and lineage-specific reporters have proven invaluable for monitoring their emergence from cultured pluripotent stem cells (PSCs). However, reporter constructs for tracking proximal airway lineages generated from PSCs have not been previously available, limiting the characterization of these cells. Here, we engineer mouse and human PSC lines carrying airway secretory lineage reporters that facilitate the tracking, purification, and profiling of this lung subtype. Through bulk and single-cell-based global transcriptomic profiling, we find PSC-derived airway secretory cells are susceptible to phenotypic plasticity exemplified by the tendency to co-express both a proximal airway secretory program as well as an alveolar type 2 cell program, which can be minimized by inhibiting endogenous Wnt signaling. Our results provide global profiles of engineered lung cell fates, a guide for improving their directed differentiation, and a human model of the developing airway. : In this article, Kotton and colleagues show that human pluripotent stem cell-derived airway epithelial spheres contain basal and secretory airway cells. Using reporter lines for the secretory airway lineage alongside transcriptomic and functional analyses, they demonstrate that these cells have characteristic features of this population but are susceptible to Wnt-dependent phenotypic drift toward an alveolar type II cell-like program. Keywords: pluripotent stem cells, lung epithelium, directed differentiation, single-cell RNA sequencing, airway, alveoli