International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Mar 2024)

Age-Dependent Inflammatory Microenvironment Mediates Alveolar Regeneration

  • Rui Quan,
  • Chenhong Shi,
  • Bing Fang,
  • Yanan Sun,
  • Taiqi Qu,
  • Xifan Wang,
  • Ran Wang,
  • Yiran Zhang,
  • Fazheng Ren,
  • Yixuan Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms25063476
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 6
p. 3476

Abstract

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Lung aging triggers the onset of various chronic lung diseases, with alveolar repair being a key focus for alleviating pulmonary conditions. The regeneration of epithelial structures, particularly the differentiation from type II alveolar epithelial (AT2) cells to type I alveolar epithelial (AT1) cells, serves as a prominent indicator of alveolar repair. Nonetheless, the precise role of aging in impeding alveolar regeneration and its underlying mechanism remain to be fully elucidated. Our study employed histological methods to examine lung aging effects on structural integrity and pathology. Lung aging led to alveolar collapse, disrupted epithelial structures, and inflammation. Additionally, a relative quantification analysis revealed age-related decline in AT1 and AT2 cells, along with reduced proliferation and differentiation capacities of AT2 cells. To elucidate the mechanisms underlying AT2 cell functional decline, we employed transcriptomic techniques and revealed a correlation between inflammatory factors and genes regulating proliferation and differentiation. Furthermore, a D-galactose-induced senescence model in A549 cells corroborated our omics experiments and confirmed inflammation-induced cell cycle arrest and a >30% reduction in proliferation/differentiation. Physiological aging-induced chronic inflammation impairs AT2 cell functions, hindering tissue repair and promoting lung disease progression. This study offers novel insights into chronic inflammation’s impact on stem cell-mediated alveolar regeneration.

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