Literature DB >> 26580007

Therapeutic antibodies reveal Notch control of transdifferentiation in the adult lung.

Daniel Lafkas1, Amy Shelton1, Cecilia Chiu2, Gladys de Leon Boenig3, Yongmei Chen2, Scott S Stawicki2, Christian Siltanen1, Mike Reichelt4, Meijuan Zhou5, Xiumin Wu5, Jeffrey Eastham-Anderson4, Heather Moore6, Meron Roose-Girma7, Yvonne Chinn8, Julie Q Hang8, Søren Warming7, Jackson Egen6, Wyne P Lee5, Cary Austin4, Yan Wu2, Jian Payandeh3, John B Lowe4, Christian W Siebel1.   

Abstract

Prevailing dogma holds that cell-cell communication through Notch ligands and receptors determines binary cell fate decisions during progenitor cell divisions, with differentiated lineages remaining fixed. Mucociliary clearance in mammalian respiratory airways depends on secretory cells (club and goblet) and ciliated cells to produce and transport mucus. During development or repair, the closely related Jagged ligands (JAG1 and JAG2) induce Notch signalling to determine the fate of these lineages as they descend from a common proliferating progenitor. In contrast to such situations in which cell fate decisions are made in rapidly dividing populations, cells of the homeostatic adult airway epithelium are long-lived, and little is known about the role of active Notch signalling under such conditions. To disrupt Jagged signalling acutely in adult mammals, here we generate antibody antagonists that selectively target each Jagged paralogue, and determine a crystal structure that explains selectivity. We show that acute Jagged blockade induces a rapid and near-complete loss of club cells, with a concomitant gain in ciliated cells, under homeostatic conditions without increased cell death or division. Fate analyses demonstrate a direct conversion of club cells to ciliated cells without proliferation, meeting a conservative definition of direct transdifferentiation. Jagged inhibition also reversed goblet cell metaplasia in a preclinical asthma model, providing a therapeutic foundation. Our discovery that Jagged antagonism relieves a blockade of cell-to-cell conversion unveils unexpected plasticity, and establishes a model for Notch regulation of transdifferentiation.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26580007     DOI: 10.1038/nature15715

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  84 in total

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