Generation of Alveolar Epithelium using Reconstituted Basement Membrane and hiPSC‐derived Organoids

2021 ◽  
pp. 2101972
Author(s):  
Yong He ◽  
Elrade Rofaani ◽  
Xiaochen Huang ◽  
Boxing Huang ◽  
Feng Liang ◽  
...  
1996 ◽  
Vol 270 (1) ◽  
pp. L3-L27 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. E. Dunsmore ◽  
D. E. Rannels

The lung and other organs are comprised of both cellular and extracellular compartments. Interaction of these components modulates physiological function at the organ, cellular, and subcellular levels. Extracellular components in the gas-exchange region of the lung include both noncellular interstitium and basement membranes. Connective tissue elements of the interstitium in part determine ventilatory function by contributions to tissue compliance and to resistance of the diffusion barrier. The basement membrane underlies cells of both the alveolar epithelium and the capillary endothelium; basement membrane components exert biological effects on adjacent cells through receptor-mediated interactions. This review emphasizes current knowledge concerning the composition and biological activity of extracellular matrix in the alveolar region of the lung. Matrix synthesis and turnover are also considered. Directions for future research are suggested in the context of current knowledge of the lung and other model systems.


1956 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 287-292 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. E. Karrer

The fine structure of the alveolar basement membrane of mouse lung was discussed on the basis of three electron micrographs. The basement membrane, i.e., the intercellular layer between endothelium and alveolar epithelium, was found to be of variable width. In its thin parts it appeared rather homogeneous, and did not reveal well defined layers of fibrils. In its thicker portions, some of which may be due to oblique sectioning, cell fragments could be seen lying inside the basement membrane layer. Their exact nature was not determined. In other thickened portions of the membrane bundles of slender (about 23 to 25 mµ) fibrils were found and were tentatively interpreted as collagen fibrils, in spite of the fact that a periodicity could not be observed.


1994 ◽  
Vol 267 (4) ◽  
pp. L365-L374
Author(s):  
Y. C. Lee ◽  
R. Hogg ◽  
D. E. Rannels

Although integrity of the alveolar basement membrane may influence progression of lung injury induced by inhaled particulates, little is known about direct effects of coal dusts on the alveolar epithelium or its extracellular matrix (ECM). Effects of dust on synthesis of cell and ECM proteins by type II cells (T2P) was thus investigated. Three coal dusts (anthracite no. 867; bituminous no. 1451 and no. 1361) and mine dust MIT-3, of respirable size, were studied as a function of dose and time over 3 days of primary T2P culture. On day 1, 750 micrograms/ml of 867 were required to increase relative synthesis of ECM proteins (ECM/cell). MIT-3, 1451, and 1361 were without effect. By day 3, 867 or MIT-3 increased ECM/cell 60-100% at 300 micrograms/ml; 1451 produced modest, dose-dependent stimulation, whereas 1361 remained without effect. None of the dusts caused significant cytotoxicity. The results show dose- and time-dependent effects of well-characterized coal and mind dusts to modify partitioning of newly synthesized proteins into the ECM and suggest that coal dust exposure may modulate structure or function of the subepithelial basement membrane.


2011 ◽  
Vol 356 (1) ◽  
pp. 143-144
Author(s):  
Benjamin R. Bukey ◽  
Jason L. Porter ◽  
Josh M. Hancock ◽  
Jeffrey A. Stogsdill ◽  
Paul R. Reynolds

In the majority of organs which possess a lumen an epithelium is interposed between the parenchyma of the organ and the luminal space. Usually this epithelium lies upon a well-defined layer of fine reticulum fibres which constitutes the basement membrane. The developing lung of the embryo rabbit is no exception to this general rule, at any rate until the 24th day of embryonic life, when the complicated branching lumen is everywhere lined by tall, columnar epithelium supported by a reticular basement membrane. But histological examination of the lung of the adult rabbit shows no sign of epithelium or basement membrane. Indeed, the surface structure of the alveoli of the adult mammalian lung is one of the oldest of the unsolved problems in histology. A detailed study by several methods of investigation of the stages intervening between the embryo and adult lung shows that the luminal epithelium ceases to be visible after the 26th day of the 32-day gestation period. Before the 26th day, the total volume of epithelium increases but is unaccompanied by any evidence of cell division. Cell rupture is therefore imminent, and its results become apparent between the 24th and 26th days when degenerate nuclei are extruded into the distal part of the respiratory lumen from ruptured cell envelopes. The healthy epithelium of the more proximal parts of the lumen persists as bronchiolar epithelium, in which quantitative evidence of normal cell division is found. These facts explain the difficulty in interpreting the picture of cell outlines which is seen when silver nitrate impregnates the cement lines between epithelial cells. In the earlier days of embryonic life the impregnated cell outlines reveal the regular meshwork characteristic of a complete epithelium. In the adult lung no such clear and regular picture is seen, and a close study of the intervening stages discloses that this irregularity of cell outlines starts at the 24th day and progresses with the degenerative changes in the epithelium and extrusion of nuclei. When the lung starts to breathe such traces of impregnated epithelium as were present at term finally disappear. In the adult rabbit, counts of nuclei in the alveolar septa show that there are not enough cells to do more than invest the capillary plexus and to provide nuclei for a few alveolar phagocytes. Moreover, a method of investigation whereby the structure of the alveolar septum may be dissociated fails to reveal any trace of lining epithelium. On histological grounds, therefore, the presence of an alveolar epithelium in the lung of the adult rabbit seems to be ruled out. Criticism can, however, be levelled against this conclusion on the grounds of lung growth. It has been said that the presence of alveolar epithelium is required to account for further subdivision of the lung lumen during both pre- and post-natal life. New evidence is given in the second part of this investigation which suggests that the complexity of subdivision of the lung lumen is determined by purely physical factors. It is shown that the inequality of growth rates of total lung volume and of volume of the interstitial tissues is the fundamental factor which determines the complexity of lung architecture. The latter is the result of subdivision of the lumen by a complicated system of septa. The greater the number of septa, the more complex is the subdivision and the higher is the pitch of differentiation. By measuring numbers of septa in terms of the internal surface area of the lumen, a method has been found for quantitative estimation of differentiation. A linear relation is found to exist between this estimate of differentiation on the one hand and the ratio of total lung volume to interstitial volume on the other. The values of this ratio increase throughout embryonic life. Growth of interstitial tissue does not therefore keep pace with growth of total lung volume. The deficit in terms of volume is made good by the increasing volume of the lumen, but there is another deficit. For if interstitial tissue does not grow as rapidly as lung volume, then elastic fibres may be expected not to grow as rapidly. If this is so (and it is the heart of the problem), they will stretch as the lung expands with growth, and the ratio of total lung volume to interstitial volume will be a measure of the stretch to which elastic fibres are subjected in the growing lung. A linear relation is found between this ratio and numbers of septa, each of which contains a bundle of elastic fibres in its free edge. It is this linear relation which suggests a causal relationship between tension and the structural complexity of lung architecture. Support for this view in lungs at term and during the early stages of post-natal life is given by the results of artificial distension. The plan of the 5-day lung, the complexity of whose structure is much greater than that at term, can be reproduced by artificial distension of the dead lung at term. Hence there can be no question of any vital processes of growth nor of epithelial activity. Distension alters the lung architecture by altering fibre tension, especially the tension of elastic fibres. In the living lung, it is very probable that active contraction of plain muscle in the mouths of alveolar ducts and their main subdivisions is also involved. The fact that the structural results of respiration and 5 days’ growth in vivo can be so completely reproduced by artificial distension, as it were in vitro , is good reason to believe that subdivision of the respiratory lumen in both cases depends upon the same factor, the tension in elastic fibres.


Author(s):  
D. E. Philpott ◽  
A. Takahashi

Two month, eight month and two year old rats were treated with 10 or 20 mg/kg of E. Coli endotoxin I. P. The eight month old rats proved most resistant to the endotoxin. During fixation the aorta, carotid artery, basil arartery of the brain, coronary vessels of the heart, inner surfaces of the heart chambers, heart and skeletal muscle, lung, liver, kidney, spleen, brain, retina, trachae, intestine, salivary gland, adrenal gland and gingiva were treated with ruthenium red or alcian blue to preserve the mucopolysaccharide (MPS) coating. Five, 8 and 24 hrs of endotoxin treatment produced increasingly marked capillary damage, disappearance of the MPS coating, edema, destruction of endothelial cells and damage to the basement membrane in the liver, kidney and lung.


Author(s):  
Jared Grantham ◽  
Larry Welling

In the course of urine formation in mammalian kidneys over 90% of the glomerular filtrate moves from the tubular lumen into the peritubular capillaries by both active and passive transport mechanisms. In all of the morphologically distinct segments of the renal tubule, e.g. proximal tubule, loop of Henle and distal nephron, the tubular absorbate passes through a basement membrane which rests against the basilar surface of the epithelial cells. The basement membrane is in a strategic location to affect the geometry of the tubules and to influence the movement of tubular absorbate into the renal interstitium. In the present studies we have determined directly some of the mechanical and permeability characteristics of tubular basement membranes.


Author(s):  
R. G. Gerrity ◽  
M. Richardson

Dogs were injected intravenously with E_. coli endotoxin (2 mg/kg), and lung samples were taken at 15 min., 1 hr. and 24 hrs. At 15 min., occlusion of pulmonary capillaries by degranulating platelets and polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PML) was evident (Fig. 1). Capillary endothelium was intact but endothelial damage in small arteries and arterioles, accompanied by intraalveolar hemorrhage, was frequent (Fig. 2). Sloughing of the surfactant layer from alveolar epithelium was evident (Fig. 1). At 1 hr., platelet-PML plugs were no longer seen in capillaries, the endothelium of which was often vacuolated (Fig. 3). Interstitial edema and destruction of alveolar epithelium were seen, and type II cells had discharged their granules into the alveoli (Fig. 4). At 24 hr. phagocytic PML's were frequent in peripheral alveoli, while centrally, alveoli and vessels were packed with fibrin thrombi and PML's (Fig. 5). In similar dogs rendered thrombocytopenic with anti-platelet serum, lung ultrastructure was similar to that of controls, although PML's were more frequently seen in capillaries in the former (Fig. 6).


Author(s):  
Douglas R. Keene ◽  
Gregory P. Lunstrum ◽  
Patricia Rousselle ◽  
Robert E. Burgeson

A mouse monoclonal antibody produced from collagenase digests of human amnion was used by LM and TEM to study the distribution and ultrastructural features of an antigen present in epithelial tissues and in cultured human keratinocytes, and by immunoaffinity chromatography to partially purify the antigen from keratinocyte cell culture media.By immunofluorescence microscopy, the antigen displays a tissue distribution similar to type VII collagen; positive staining of the epithelial basement membrane is seen in skin, oral mucosa, trachea, esophagus, cornea, amnion and lung. Images from rotary shadowed preparations isolated by affinity chromatography demonstrate a population of rod-like molecules 107 nm in length, having pronounced globular domains at each end. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis suggests that the size of this molecule is approximately 440kDa, and that it is composed of three nonidentical chains disulfide bonded together.


Author(s):  
John H. L. Watson ◽  
C. N. Sun

That the etiology of Whipple's disease could be bacterial was first suggested from electron micrographs in 1960. Evidence for binary fission of the bacteria, their phagocytosis by histiocytes in the lamina propria, their occurrence between and within the cells of the epithelium and on the brush border of the lumen were reported later. Scanning electron microscopy has been applied by us in an attempt to confirm the earlier observations by the new technique and to describe the bacterium further. Both transmission and scanning electron microscopy have been used concurrently to study the same biopsy specimens, and transmission observations have been used to confirm those made by scanning.The locations of the brush borders, the columnar epithelial cells, the basement membrane and the lamina propria beneath it were each easily identified by scanning electron microscopy. The lamina propria was completely filled with the wiener-shaped bacteria, Fig. 1.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document