| Literature DB >> 33187367 |
Masafumi Horie1, Alessandra Castaldi1, Mitsuhiro Sunohara1,2,3, Hongjun Wang1, Yanbin Ji1, Yixin Liu1, Fan Li4, Thomas A Wilkinson4, Long Hung4, Hua Shen1, Hidenori Kage2, Ite A Offringa5,6,7, Crystal N Marconett5,6,7, Per Flodby1, Beiyun Zhou1,6, Zea Borok1,6,7.
Abstract
Molecular and functional characterization of alveolar epithelial type I (AT1) cells has been challenging due to difficulty in isolating sufficient numbers of viable cells. Here we performed single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq) of tdTomato+ cells from lungs of AT1 cell-specific Aqp5-Cre-IRES-DsRed (ACID);R26tdTomato reporter mice. Following enzymatic digestion, CD31-CD45-E-cadherin+tdTomato+ cells were subjected to fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) followed by scRNA-seq. Cell identity was confirmed by immunofluorescence using cell type-specific antibodies. After quality control, 92 cells were analyzed. Most cells expressed 'conventional' AT1 cell markers (Aqp5, Pdpn, Hopx, Ager), with heterogeneous expression within this population. The remaining cells expressed AT2, club, basal or ciliated cell markers. Integration with public datasets identified three robust AT1 cell- and lung-enriched genes, Ager, Rtkn2 and Gprc5a, that were conserved across species. GPRC5A co-localized with HOPX and was not expressed in AT2 or airway cells in mouse, rat and human lung. GPRC5A co-localized with AQP5 but not pro-SPC or CC10 in mouse lung epithelial cell cytospins. We enriched mouse AT1 cells to perform molecular phenotyping using scRNA-seq. Further characterization of putative AT1 cell-enriched genes revealed GPRC5A as a conserved AT1 cell surface marker that may be useful for AT1 cell isolation.Entities:
Keywords: AT1 cell marker; GPRC5A; alveolar epithelial type 1 cell; aquaporin 5 (AQP5); scRNA-seq
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33187367 PMCID: PMC7697677 DOI: 10.3390/cells9112460
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Figure 1Sorting of tdTomato+ cells from ACID;R26tdTomato mice. (A) Flow cytometry strategy for sorting AT1 cells. CD45/CD31 negative, E-cadherin positive, tdTomato positive cells were sorted; 31% ± 10% (n = 3) of epithelial cells from test mice were positive for tdTomato (panel 4). The box in the third panel delineates the CD45/CD31-negative and E-cadherin-positive populations. (B) Immunofluorescence images of cytospins after fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS). Approximately 80% of cells are positive for tdTomato.
Figure 2Clustering of 92 tdTomato-positive cells in ACID;R26tdTomato mice. (A) Unsupervised UMAP divided 92 cells into 6 clusters (C1–C6). Expression level (C and D) represents absolute read count. (B) Heatmap with 10–15 markers representative of each cell type. Yellow and purple colors indicate high and low expression, respectively. (C) UMAP plots with known cell type-specific marker genes. AT1 cells (Ager, Hopx, Pdpn, Igfbp2, Cav1, Cav2 and Gramd2), AT2 cells (Sftpc), club cells (Scgb1a1), basal cells (Krt5), ciliated cells (Foxj1) and fibroblasts (Vim). Blue and grey indicate high and low expression, respectively. (D) Violin plot with the same marker genes as in C.
Figure 3TdTomato expression in ACID;R26tdTomato mouse lung. (A) Violin plot for Aqp5 (left) and tdTomato (right). (B) Scatter plot between Aqp5 and tdTomato expression. (C) Immunofluorescence staining shows CC10 (green) and tdTomato (red) expression in ACID;R26tdTomato mouse lung. Goat IgG (left panel) was used as negative control. White dotted line indicates outline of airway. (D) Immunofluorescence staining shows pro-SP-C (green) and tdTomato (red) expression in ACID;R26tdTomato mouse lung. Goat IgG (left panel) was used as negative control.
Figure 4High expression of Gprc5a, Rtkn2 and Ager in AT1 cells and lung. (A) Flowchart for identifying AT1 cell- and lung-enriched genes. (B) UMAP of scRNA-seq data from Mouse Cell Atlas [28] with Gprc5a, Rtkn2 and Ager. Blue and grey indicate high and low expression (determined by absolute read count), respectively. (C) Gene expression of GPRC5A, RTKN2 and AGER in lung (red) and 29 other organs (grey) from GTEx database. Counts per million was used for normalization between samples.
Figure 5GPRC5A expression in mouse distal lung. (A) Representative single staining for GPRC5A (green) in mouse distal lung. Blue = DAPI. Rabbit IgG (right panel) was used as negative control. (B) Representative double staining for GPRC5A (green) and HOPX (red) in mouse distal lung. Blue = 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI). Negative controls are shown in Supplemental Figure S7A. (C) Representative double staining for GPRC5A (green) and pro-SPC (red) in mouse distal lung. Blue = DAPI. Negative controls are shown in Supplemental Figure S7B.
Figure 6GPRC5A expression in human and rat lung. (A) Representative single staining for GPRC5A (green) in human distal lung. Blue = DAPI. Rabbit IgG (right panel) is the negative control. (B) Representative double staining for GPRC5A (green) and ABCA3 (red) in human distal lung. Blue = DAPI. Negative controls are showed in Supplemental Figure S7C. (C) Representative single staining for GPRC5A (green) in human (upper panel) and rat (lower panel) airway. White box indicates airway. Red = propidium iodide (PI).
Figure 7Co-staining of GPRC5A with AQP5, pro-SPC and CC10 in crude cytospin preparations from mouse lung. Representative double staining for GPRC5A (green) and AQP5 (upper panel, red), pro-SPC (middle panel, red) or CC10 (lower panel, red) in cytospins of crude preparations from digested mouse lung tissue. Blue = DAPI. Rabbit and goat IgG were negative controls.