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Assessing Human Airway Epithelial Progenitor Cells for Cystic Fibrosis Cell Therapy

Rhianna E. Lee, S. M. Miller, Teresa Mascenik, Catherine A. Lewis, Hong Dang, Zachary Boggs, Robert Tarran, Scott H. Randell

2020American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

(CF transmembrane regulator) gene. Pharmacologic therapies directed at CFTR have been developed but are not effective for mutations that result in little or no mRNA or protein expression. Cell therapy is a potential mutation-agnostic approach to treatment. One strategy is to harvest human bronchial epithelial cells (HBECs) for gene addition or genetic correction, followed by expansion and engraftment. This approach will require cells to grow extensively while retaining their ability to reconstitute CFTR activity. We hypothesized that conditionally reprogrammed cell (CRC) technology, namely growth in the presence of irradiated feeder cells and a Rho kinase inhibitor, would enable expansion while maintaining cell capacity to express functional CFTR. Our goal was to compare expression of the basal cell marker NGFR (nerve growth factor receptor) and three-dimensional bronchosphere colony-forming efficiency (CFE) in early- and later-passage HBECs grown using nonproprietary bronchial epithelial growth medium or the CRC method. Cell number and CFTR activity were determined in a competitive repopulation assay employing chimeric air-liquid interface cultures. HBECs expanded using the CRC method expressed the highest NGFR levels, had the greatest 3D colony-forming efficiency at later passage, generated greater cell numbers in chimeric cultures, and most effectively reconstituted CFTR activity. In our study, the HBEC air-liquid interface model, an informative testing platform proven vital for the development of other CF therapies, illustrated that cells grown by CRC technology or equivalent methods may be useful for cell therapy of CF.

Topics & Concepts

Cystic fibrosisProgenitor cellAirwayMedicineCellCell therapyEpitheliumPathologyStem cellBiologyInternal medicineCell biologyGeneticsSurgeryNeonatal Respiratory Health ResearchCystic Fibrosis Research AdvancesEnergy Harvesting in Wireless Networks