Genetically engineered distal airway stem cell transplantation protects mice from pulmonary infection.
Zhou. Yue-Qing YQ; Shi. Yun Y; Yang. Ling L; Sun. Yu-Fen YF; Han. Yu-Fei YF; Zhao. Zi-Xian ZX; Wang. Yu-Jia YJ; Liu. Ying Y; Ma. Yu Y; Zhang. Ting T; Ren. Tao T; Dale. Tina P TP; Forsyth. Nicholas R NR; Jin. Fa-Guang FG; Qu. Jie-Ming JM; Zuo. Wei W; Xu. Jin-Fu JF
Key Findings
- Constant expression of LL-37 in transgenic mice improves clearance of Pseudomonas lung infection.
- Transplanted distal airway stem cells engineered to secrete LL-37 integrate into injured lung tissue and provide long‑term antimicrobial protection.
- Human distal airway stem cells can be isolated, expanded, and genetically modified to produce LL-37, demonstrating translational potential.
Practical Outcomes
- For now, the work is a pre‑clinical proof‑of‑concept and not something you can apply at home. It does reinforce that LL-37 has strong antimicrobial effects in the lungs and suggests that future gene‑ or cell‑based therapies might use LL-37 to fight chronic lung infections. Biohackers should watch for later developments, but no immediate dosage or protocol changes are recommended.
Summary
Scientists made mice that constantly produce the natural antimicrobial peptide LL-37 and also transplanted stem cells engineered to release LL-37 into damaged lungs. The mice cleared a dangerous lung infection (Pseudomonas aeruginosa) better and survived with less breathing trouble. Human lung stem cells were also shown to be able to be engineered the same way, hinting at future treatments.
Abstract
Severe pulmonary infection is a major threat to human health accompanied by substantial medical costs, prolonged inpatient requirements, and high mortality rates. New antimicrobial therapeutic strategies are urgently required to address the emergence of antibiotic resistance and persistent bacterial infections. In this study, we show that the constitutive expression of a native antimicrobial peptide LL-37 in transgenic mice aids in clearing Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PAO1), a major pathogen of clinical pulmonary infection. Orthotopic transplantation of adult mouse distal airway stem cells (DASCs), genetically engineered to express LL-37, into injured mouse lung foci enabled large-scale incorporation of cells and long-term release of the host defense peptide, protecting the mice from bacterial pneumonia and hypoxemia. Further, correlates of DASCs in adult humans were isolated, expanded, and genetically engineered to demonstrate successful construction of an anti-infective artificial lung. Together, our stem cell-based gene delivery therapeutic platform proposes a new strategy for addressing recurrent pulmonary infections with future translational opportunities.
Study Information
pubmed
2019
2019-11-29T00:00:00.000Z
10.15252/emmm.201810233
27
52