Konstantinos-Dionysios Alysandratos’s research while affiliated with Boston Medical Center and other places

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Publications (45)


Coronavirus endoribonuclease antagonizes ZBP1-mediated necroptosis and delays multiple cell death pathways
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March 2025

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20 Reads

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

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Allen Caobi

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Identifying conserved mechanisms used by viruses to delay host innate responses can reveal potential targets for antiviral therapeutics. Here, we investigated coronavirus nonstructural protein 15 (nsp15), which encodes a highly conserved endoribonuclease (EndoU). EndoU functions as an immune antagonist by limiting the accumulation of viral replication intermediates that would otherwise be sensed by the host. Despite being a promising antiviral target, it has been difficult to develop small-molecule inhibitors that target the EndoU active site. We generated nsp15 mutants of the coronaviruses severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) and mouse hepatitis virus (MHV)-A59 and identified conserved residues within the amino-terminal domain that are required for EndoU activity. Loss of EndoU activity caused the activation of host sensors, which limited viral replication in interferon-responsive cells and attenuated disease in MHV-infected mice. Using transcriptional profiling, we found that MHV EndoU mutant viruses upregulate multiple host sensors, including Z-form nucleic acid-binding protein 1 (ZBP1). We found that nsp15 mutants induced early, robust ZBP1-mediated necroptosis. EndoU mutant viruses also induced ZBP1-independent apoptosis and pyroptosis pathways, causing early, robust cell death that limits virus replication and pathogenesis. Overall, we document the importance of the amino-terminal domain for EndoU function. We also highlight the importance of nsp15/EndoU activity for evading host sensors, delaying cell death, and promoting pathogenesis.



Figure 1. Embedding of alveolar progenitor cell aggregates enables viable alveolar organoid formation in synthetic HA hydrogels of various moduli (A) Schematic overview of experimental approach using single alveolar progenitor cells: alveolar progenitors are isolated from alveolar organoids in Matrigel and resuspended into single cells prior to embedding into HA hydrogels. (B) Representative bright-field and fluorescence images showing SFTPC-tdTomato (red) expression in Matrigel and HA hydrogels with Young's moduli of 1.5 (''soft''), 4 (''medium''), and 20 kPa ('stiff') at day 10 (d10). Scale bar 300 mm. (C) Quantification of organoid formation efficiency in Matrigel and HA hydrogels at day 14, n R 8 individual hydrogels from 3 independent experiments. (D) Viability of embedded single cells in Matrigel and HA hydrogels at day 10. n R 10 regions of interest (ROIs) from 3 independent experiments. (E) Schematic overview of experimental approach using aggregated alveolar progenitor cells: alveolar progenitor cells are isolated from alveolar organoids in Matrigel, resuspended into single cells, and aggregated within HA hydrogel-based microwells for 3 days prior embedding into HA hydrogels.
Figure 2. HA hydrogels maintain expression of AT2 cell identity markers of alveolar organoids (A-C) Quantification of bulk gene expression of AT2 cell identity markers, including LAMP3, SFTPB, SFTPA, NAPSA, and SFPTC for embedded alveolar progenitor cell aggregates in Matrigel and HA hydrogel (medium, 4 kPa) at day 14. n = 9 repeated qPCR measurements from 3 independent experiments. ****p < 0.0001, ***p < 0.001, *p < 0.05, ns: no significant difference by unpaired Student's t test. (D) Representative fluorescent images of alveolar progenitor cell aggregates embedded in Matrigel and HA hydrogel and immunostained for SFTPC, SFTPB, and SFTPA and Hoechst at day 14. (E) Representative fluorescent images of alveolar progenitor cell aggregates in Matrigel and HA hydrogels immunostained for MUC1 at day 14.
Figure 3. Alveolar progenitor cell aggregation enables control over alveolar organoid size and density (A) Schematic of experimental approach: the relationship between cell density in the microwell array (i.e., aggregate size) prior to embedding and final size. (B) Representative bright-field and fluorescent images and quantification of projected organoid size of alveolar organoids formed from small, medium, and large aggregates embedded in HA hydrogels at day 14. Scale bar 300 mm. n = 2 independent experiments. Shaded error bars represent standard error of the mean (SEM).
Figure 4. Alveolar progenitor cell aggregates deposit ECM in the microwells and upon embedding in HA hydrogels (A) Schematic of experimental approach: ECM deposition by aggregates in microwells was visualized. (B) Representative fluorescent images of ECM secreted by the aggregates in the microwells (day 3). Scale bar 50 mm. White arrowhead shows collagen IV in the middle of an aggregate. (C) Schematic of experimental approach: ECM deposition by aggregates/organoids upon embedding into HA hydrogels was visualized and quantified. (D) Quantification of projected nascent glycan thickness beyond the cell membrane across the culture period. n R 20 alveolar organoids from 3 independent experiments. (E) Quantification of the organoid-hydrogel distance (i.e., the area between the aggregate/organoid and hydrogel) across the culture period. n R 20 alveolar organoids from 3 independent experiments. (F) Quantification of projected laminin and collagen IV per aggregate/organoid area. n R 28 aggregates/organoids from 3 independent experiments. (G) Representative max-project images of alveolar organoids in HA hydrogels co-stained for nascent glycans, laminin, and collagen IV at day 14. Scale bar 50 mm. (H) Representative transmission electron microscopy images of alveolar organoids in HA hydrogels at day 14. Arrowheads show extracellular fibrillar structures. Scale bar 100 nm. (I) Schematic of experimental approach: laminin was co-embedded in the HA hydrogels with aggregates, and subsequent ECM deposition was assessed.
Figure 5. Aggregation and nascent ECM deposition support alveolar organoid formation and growth in HA hydrogels (A) Schematic of experimental approach and perturbation studies. Aggregates are formed from individual cells seeded within microwells and cultured for 3 days, which enables formation of cell-to-cell contacts and deposition of nascent ECM. Aggregates are then embedded into HA hydrogels to grow and form organoids. Perturbation studies include embedding of (i) individual cells cultured in suspension for 3 days, (ii) immature aggregates after 15 min within microwells, and (iii) aggregates with digested nascent ECM. (B and C) Representative bright-field image and fluorescent image of structures at day 14 in HA hydrogels. Scale bar 300 mm. Inset: representative immunofluorescence images of ECM secreted prior embedding into HA hydrogels. Scale bar 50 mm. (D) Quantification of the fold change of average organoid size in HA hydrogels at day 14 compared to day 1 post embedding. n R 4 individual hydrogels across 3 independent experiments. **p < 0.01, ns: no significant difference by one-way ANOVA with Tukey's multiple comparisons test.
Nascent matrix deposition supports alveolar organoid formation from aggregates in synthetic hydrogels
  • Article
  • Full-text available

December 2024

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35 Reads

Stem Cell Reports

Human induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived alveolar organoids have emerged as a system to model the alveolar epithelium in homeostasis and disease. However, alveolar organoids are typically grown in Matrigel, a mouse sarcoma-derived basement membrane matrix that offers poor control over matrix properties, prompting the development of synthetic hydrogels as a Matrigel alternative. Here, we develop a two-step culture method that involves pre-aggregation of organoids in hydrogel-based microwells followed by embedding in a synthetic hydrogel that supports alveolar organoid growth, while also offering considerable control over organoid and hydrogel properties. We find that the aggregated organoids secrete their own nascent extracellular matrix (ECM) both in the microwells and upon embedding in synthetic hydrogels, which supports their growth. Thus, the synthetic hydrogels described here allow us to de-couple exogenous and nascent ECM to interrogate the role of ECM in organoid formation.

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Figure 1. Generation of Sftpc I73T knock-in mouse model. (A) Design of the Sftpc I73T knock-in allele. Founder mice carrying the knock-in allele were crossed to EIIA-Cre deleter mice to excise the neomycin resistance cassette. (B) Representative H&E-stained sections from 6-8 weeks old WT/WT and I73T/I73T mice. Scale bars: 200 µm. (C) Quantitative morphometry of (B) using ImageJ expressed as the volume density of alveolar septa (VVsep), mean linear intercept of the airspaces (Lm), the mean transsectional wall length (Lmw), and the surface area density of the air spaces (SVair). I73T/I73T lungs showed significantly reduced volume density of alveolar septa and increased mean linear intercept of the airspaces.
Figure 2. Deletion of Emc3 rescued I73T-associated alveolar simplification in the neonatal mice (A) AT2-specific deletion of Emc3 was induced by injection of tamoxifen to neonatal mice on postnatal days 6, 7 and 8 (P6, 7, and 8). Lung tissue was analyzed on postnatal day 21 (P21). Representative H&E-stained lung sections are shown. Scale bars, 200 µm. (B) ImageJ was used to quantify the H&E staining results in (A). Both defects of volume density of alveolar septa (VVsep) and mean linear intercept of the airspaces (Lm) in I73T/CreERT lungs were rescued by deletion of Emc3. Means ± SEM; *P<0.05, **P<0.01, ***P<0.001 using oneway ANOVA multiple comparisons test, n=6 (WT/CreERT), n=5 (I73T/CreERT), n=6 (I73T/CreERT;Emc3 ∆/∆ ). (C) Whole lung homogenates from mice treated as in (A) were prepared on P21 for Western blotting. Mature SP-B (mSP-B) levels were similar among three groups. Reduced levels of mSP-C were detected in I73T/CreERT and I73T/CreERT; Emc3 ∆/∆ lungs. (D) Lung sections were prepared from P21 mice treated as in (A) and stained for mSP-B (green), mSP-C (red) and DAPI (blue). While mSP-B was unchanged, mSP-C was decreased in I73T/CreERT and I73T/CreERT; Emc3 ∆/∆ lungs. Scale bars, 20 µm. (E) Western blot of AT2 cell lysates prepared from P21 mice treated as in (A). (F) Lung sections were prepared from P21 mice treated as in (A) and stained for proSP-C (green), ABCA3 (red), LAMP1 (white) and DAPI (blue). Deletion of Emc3 did not change ABCA3
Figure 4. Loss of Emc3 rescues trafficking defects and mitochondria dysfunction caused by SP-C(I73T) (A) Protein sequencing data were obtained from AT2 cells sorted from control (WT/CreERT), Sftpc I73T heterozygous (I73T/CreERT), and I73T/CreERT;Emc3 ∆/∆ mice on P21 after treatment with tamoxifen as in Figure 2A. Protein levels in I73T/CreERT;Emc3 ∆/∆ AT2 cells were compared to that in the other two genotypes and proteins significantly altered in one or more conditions were un-biasedly clustered and visualized in a z-score normalized heatmap. Group 1, proteins induced in AT2 cells from I73T/CreERT;Emc3 ∆/∆ lungs; Group 2, proteins rescued by Emc3 deletion
Figure 6. EMC3 interacts with VCP to influence SP-C(I73T) trafficking (A) Mass spectrometry of proteins isolated from EMC3 co-immunoprecipitates in MLE-15 cells identified 26 proteins as potential EMC3 binding partners. For each experimental pair, MLE-15 cells were transfected with empty vector or vector encoding Myc-tagged EMC3 (Myc-EMC3).
Figure 7. Accumulation and localization of SP-C(I73T) and EMC4 in patients with SFTPC I73T -related interstitial lung diseases.
EMC3 regulates trafficking and pulmonary toxicity of the SFTPCI73T mutation associated with interstitial lung disease

October 2024

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77 Reads

The Journal of clinical investigation

The most common mutation in surfactant protein C gene (SFTPC), SFTPCI73T, causes interstitial lung disease with few therapeutic options. We previously demonstrated that EMC3, an important component of the multiprotein endoplasmic reticulum membrane complex (EMC), is required for surfactant homeostasis in alveolar type 2 epithelial (AT2) cells at birth. In the present study, we investigated the role of EMC3 in the control of SFTPCI73T metabolism and its associated alveolar dysfunction. Using a knock-in mouse model phenocopying the I73T mutation, we demonstrated that conditional deletion of Emc3 in AT2 cells rescued alveolar remodeling/simplification defects in neonatal and adult mice. Proteomic analysis revealed that Emc3 depletion reversed the disruption of vesicle trafficking pathways and rescued the mitochondrial dysfunction associated with I73T mutation. Affinity purification-mass spectrometry analysis identified potential EMC3 interacting proteins in lung AT2 cells, including Valosin Containing Protein (VCP) and its interactors. Treatment of SftpcI73T knock-in mice and SFTPCI73T expressing iAT2 cells derived from SFTPCI73T patient-specific iPSCs with the specific VCP inhibitor CB5083 restored alveolar structure and SFTPCI73T trafficking respectively. Taken together, the present work identifies the EMC complex and VCP in the metabolism of the disease-associated SFTPCI73T mutant, providing novel therapeutical targets for SFTPCI73T-associated interstitial lung disease.


A roadmap to precision treatments for familial pulmonary fibrosis

May 2024

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25 Reads

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2 Citations

EBioMedicine

Interstitial lung diseases (ILDs) in adults and children (chILD) are a heterogeneous group of lung disorders leading to inflammation, abnormal tissue repair and scarring of the lung parenchyma often resulting in respiratory failure and death. Inherited factors directly cause, or contribute significantly to the risk of developing ILD, so called familial pulmonary fibrosis (FPF), and monogenic forms may have a poor prognosis and respond poorly to current treatments. Specific, variant-targeted or precision treatments are lacking. Clinical trials of repurposed drugs, anti-fibrotic medications and specific treatments are emerging but for many patients no interventions exist. We convened an expert working group to develop an overarching framework to address the existing research gaps in basic, translational, and clinical research and identified areas for future development of preclinical models, candidate medications and innovative clinical trials. In this Position Paper, we summarise working group discussions, recommendations, and unresolved questions concerning precision treatments for FPF.


Generation of human alveolar epithelial type I cells from pluripotent stem cells

April 2024

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95 Reads

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23 Citations

Cell Stem Cell

Alveolar epithelial type I cells (AT1s) line the gas exchange barrier of the distal lung and have been historically challenging to isolate or maintain in cell culture. Here, we engineer a human in vitro AT1 model system via directed differentiation of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). We use primary adult AT1 global transcriptomes to suggest benchmarks and pathways, such as Hippo-LATS-YAP/TAZ signaling, enriched in these cells. Next, we generate iPSC-derived alveolar epithelial type II cells (AT2s) and find that nuclear YAP signaling is sufficient to promote a broad transcriptomic shift from AT2 to AT1 gene programs. The resulting cells express a molecular, morphologic, and functional phenotype reminiscent of human AT1 cells, including the capacity to form a flat epithelial barrier producing characteristic extracellular matrix molecules and secreted ligands. Our results provide an in vitro model of human alveolar epithelial differentiation and a potential source of human AT1s.


Impaired AMPK Control of Alveolar Epithelial Cell Metabolism Promotes Pulmonary Fibrosis

March 2024

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41 Reads

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1 Citation

Alveolar epithelial type II (AT2) cell dysfunction is implicated in the pathogenesis of familial and sporadic idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF). We previously described that expression of an AT2 cell exclusive disease-associated protein isoform (SP-CI73T) in murine and patient-specific induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived AT2 cells leads to a block in late macroautophagy and promotes time-dependent mitochondrial impairments; however, how a metabolically dysfunctional AT2 cell results in fibrosis remains elusive. Here using murine and human iPSC-derived AT2 cell models expressing SP-CI73T, we characterize the molecular mechanisms governing alterations in AT2 cell metabolism that lead to increased glycolysis, decreased mitochondrial biogenesis, disrupted fatty acid oxidation, accumulation of impaired mitochondria, and diminished AT2 cell progenitor capacity manifesting as reduced AT2 self-renewal and accumulation of transitional epithelial cells. We identify deficient AMP-kinase signaling as a key upstream signaling hub driving disease in these dysfunctional AT2 cells and augment this pathway to restore alveolar epithelial metabolic function, thus successfully alleviating lung fibrosis in vivo.



Nascent matrix deposition supports alveolar organoid formation from aggregates in synthetic hydrogels

March 2024

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113 Reads

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1 Citation

Highlights Alveolar organoids are formed with a two-step, Matrigel-free method in a semi-synthetic hyaluronic acid (HA) hydrogel The two-step method offers control over alveolar size, density, and growth Alveolar organoids maintain their AT2 identity in HA hydrogels Alveolar organoids secrete nascent extracellular matrix supporting organoid growth without Matrigel Summary Human induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) derived alveolar organoids have emerged as a system to model the alveolar epithelium in homeostasis and disease. However, alveolar organoids are typically grown in Matrigel, a mouse-sarcoma derived basement membrane matrix that offers poor control over matrix properties, prompting the development of synthetic hydrogels as a Matrigel alternative. Here, we develop a two-step culture method that involves pre-aggregation of organoids in hydrogel-based microwells followed by embedding in a synthetic hydrogel that supports alveolar organoid growth, while also offering considerable control over organoid and hydrogel properties. We find that the aggregated organoids secrete their own nascent extracellular matrix (ECM) both in the microwells and upon embedding in the synthetic hydrogels. Thus, the synthetic gels described here allow us to de-couple exogenous and nascent ECM in order to interrogate the role of ECM in organoid formation.


Citations (22)


... Очевидно, что генетические данные уже сегодня могут существенно дополнить уже существующие алгоритмы диагностики ИЛЗ, выступая молекулярным базисом морфологических, клинических, инструментальных данных. Согласно дорожной карте диагностических мероприятий, предлагаемой экспертами Европейского респираторного общества (ERS) и фонда ЛФ (Pulmonary Fibrosis Foundation) [26], актуальными показаниями к генетическому анализу являются следующие: наличие необъяснимого ИЗЛ в детском возрасте; наличие у пациента ИЗЛ, члены семьи пациентов с ИЗЛ первой или второй степени родства; любой пациент, у которого есть родственник, являющийся носителем патогенного/вероятно патогенного варианта ИЗЛ; любой пациент с подозрением на синдром коротких теломер (синдром коротких теломер включает фиброз легких, гематологические заболевания и заболевания печени); любой пациент с короткой длиной теломер, у которого длина теломер анализируется до генетического тестирования; любой пациент с идиопатическим фиброзирующим интерстициальным заболеванием легких в возрасте до 50 лет. ...

Reference:

Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis and Hypersensitive Pneumonitis: A Fresh View on The Role of Genetic and Epigenetic Factors in The Development and Course of Diseases
A roadmap to precision treatments for familial pulmonary fibrosis
  • Citing Article
  • May 2024

EBioMedicine

... YAP nuclear localization 38 , increased the fraction of cells expressing RAGE and nuclear YAP (Fig. 2k), inhibited AT2 and promoted AT1 fates as evaluated by staining for HT1-56 and HT2-280, respectively (Fig. 2l). The effect of LATSi is consistent with the roles of Hippo signaling in AT1 development and regeneration in mouse models 36,37 , with its effect on AT1 generation from alveolospheres 39 and with bona fide AT1 specification in transitional AT2-like cells derived from iRAPs. ...

Generation of human alveolar epithelial type I cells from pluripotent stem cells

Cell Stem Cell

... Given how polymers in solution act by limiting diffusion of ECM molecules and processing enzymes, it is reasonable to expect a physical, cross-linked polymer-based matrix or matrix-mimic to have a similar effect. ECM protein deposition and assembly has indeed been observed around 3D encapsulated cells across a variety of hydrogel types (Loebel et al. 2019;Krattiger et al. 2024) and cell types (Loebel et al. 2019;Jain et al. 2023;Eiken et al. 2024). For organoids, the local matrix deposition enabled by the presence of a diffusion barrier had important functional consequences: if basement membrane proteins are deposited, these serve as a basal polarity signal to cells, a prerequisite for epithelial sheet polarization and lumenization, as is typically observed in Matrigel organoid cultures (Jain et al. 2023;Chang et al. 2024). ...

Nascent matrix deposition supports alveolar organoid formation from aggregates in synthetic hydrogels

... Following lung injury, a number of tissue-specific stem cells, including airway basal progenitor cells, secretory progenitor cells and type 2 alveolar stem cells, are responsible for lung epithelial repair and regeneration (Basil et al., 2024). Among these cell populations, airway basal stem/progenitor cells marked by the expression of TP63 (P63), keratin 5 (KRT5) have been widely studied (Zuo et al., 2015;Vaughan et al., 2015;Kumar et al., 2011). ...

Lung repair and regeneration: Advanced models and insights into human disease
  • Citing Article
  • March 2024

Cell Stem Cell

... LATS-IN-1, an inhibitor of LATS1 and LATS2, activates YAP/TAZ signaling by inhibiting YAP/TAZ phosphorylation (Kastan et al., 2021). YAP/TAZ signaling is essential for AT1 cell differentiation, and recently, LATS-IN-1 reportedly promoted the differentiation of iPSC-derived AT2 cells into AT1 cells (Burgess et al., 2023). However, LATS-IN-1 clumped the spheroids and promoted cell proliferation, which did not induce cell thinning or quiescence, a hallmark of AT1 cells ( Figures S3A-S3D). ...

Generation of human alveolar epithelial type I cells from pluripotent stem cells

... The stem cell properties of AT2 cells are particularly important here (Juul et al. 2020). Thus, various studies have investigated how mesenchymal cells regulate the proliferation and differentiation of lung epithelial cells (Yao et al. 2024;Kathiriya et al. 2022;Murthy et al. 2022;Alysandratos et al. 2022;Lee et al. 2017;Tsukui et al. 2024; Barkauskas et al. 2013;Zepp et al. 2017) and, conversely, how epithelial cells influence fibroblasts (Yao et al. 2024;Murthy et al. 2022;Lee et al. 2017;Ushakumary et al. 2021). For example, at least in mice, fibroblasts mediate the growth, self-renewal and differentiation of AT2 progenitor cells via the wingless-related integration site (WNT)-, fibroblast growth factors (FGF)-and IL-6/ activator of transcription-3 (STAT3)-regulated ways (Yao et al. 2024;Lee et al. 2017;Zepp et al. 2017;Ushakumary et al. 2021;Riccetti et al. 2020). ...

Culture impact on the transcriptomic programs of primary and iPSC-derived human alveolar type 2 cells

JCI Insight

... AT1 cells have reached their terminal developmental stage, whereas AT2 cells produce surfactant and have the potential to differentiate into AT1 cells. Senescence in AT2 cells impairs their differentiation capacity and surfactant secretion, culminating in the failure of epithelial repair [18,19]. TGF-β overexpression in mice initially reduces surfactant proteins B (SP-B) and SP-C before lung fibrosis [20]. ...

Gene Therapeutics for Surfactant Dysfunction Disorders: Targeting the Alveolar Type 2 Epithelial Cell

Human Gene Therapy

... PCLS: precision-cut lung slices. Epithelial-like lung cell line: H441 cells (SALI culture) [37,38] iAT2 cells [39] Cytokine-challenged iAT2 cells [40] Co-culture models IPF fibroblasts+A549 cells (in transwell) [41] To study the interactions between the different cell types involved in fibrogenesis They allow the study of cell-cell interactions, either via a direct cell-cell contact and via secreted factors with paracrine actions They still oversimplify the lung structure and environment Activated macrophages+lung fibroblasts (WI-38) [42,43] Alveolar epithelial cells (A549), fibroblasts (MRC-5), and macrophages (differentiated THP-1) TGF-β-challenged [44] AT2 from IPF treated with conditioned media generated from fibroblasts [45] AT2 treated with senolytics in three-dimensional ex vivo lung tissue cultures [46] Continued https://doi.org/10.1183/16000617.0127-2023 Three-dimensional in vitro models Cells seeded on matrices and hydrogels Lung fibroblast-embedded collagen matrix [47,48] To investigate the impact of mechanical stimuli/stiffness to promote a fibrotic response (fibrogenic phenotype) ...

Generating 3D Spheres and 2D Air-Liquid Interface Cultures of Human Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell-Derived Type 2 Alveolar Epithelial Cells

Journal of Visualized Experiments

... Alveolar type 2 epithelial cells derived from human iPSCs (iAT2s) were maintained in 3D growth factor reduced (GFR)-Matrigel culture as previously described 34,35 . Plating iAT2s on 2D transwell inserts (Falcon; 6.5 mm) was performed as previously described 36 . In brief, transwell inserts were coated with diluted hESC-Qualified Matrigel (Corning) as instructed by the manufacturer. ...

Air-liquid interface culture promotes maturation and allows environmental exposure of pluripotent stem cell-derived alveolar epithelium

JCI Insight

... However, to date, most organoid culture work, including those utilizing lung cells, have primarily utilized Matrigel ™ , a nonrelevant ECM derived from cancerous mouse tissue typically utilized for stem and cancer cell proliferation, and thus, an insufficient ECM to replicate the in situ human lung environment (Petrou et al., 2020). However, recent studies have highlighted the potential role of physiologically relevant ECM on type 2 alveolar epithelial cells (AT2) differentiation (Alysandratos et al., 2022;Nizamoglu et al., 2022;Sucre et al., 2022). As such, several groups have recently been decellularized lungs for hydrogel formation and cell culture (Hughes et al., 2010;Pouliot et al., 2016;De Hilster et al., 2020;Petrou et al., 2020;Pouliot et al., 2020;Uhl et al., 2020;Alysandratos et al., 2022;Nizamoglu et al., 2022;Marhuenda et al., 2022b;Saleh et al., 2022;Sucre et al., 2022). ...

Impact of cell culture on the transcriptomic programs of primary and iPSC-derived human alveolar type 2 cells