Abstract
ARDS due to COVID-19 and other etiologies results from injury to the alveolar epithelial cell (AEC) barrier resulting in noncardiogenic pulmonary edema, which causes acute respiratory failure; clinical recovery requires epithelial regeneration. During physiologic regeneration in mice, AEC2s proliferate, exit the cell cycle, and transiently assume a transitional state before differentiating into AEC1s; persistence of the transitional state is associated with pulmonary fibrosis in humans. It is unknown whether transitional cells emerge and differentiate into AEC1s without fibrosis in human ARDS and why transitional cells differentiate into AEC1s during physiologic regeneration but persist in fibrosis. We hypothesized that incomplete but ongoing AEC1 differentiation from transitional cells without fibrosis may underlie persistent barrier permeability and fatal acute respiratory failure in ARDS. Immunostaining of postmortem ARDS lungs revealed abundant transitional cells in organized monolayers on alveolar septa without fibrosis. They were typically cuboidal or partially spread, sometimes flat, and occasionally expressed AEC1 markers. Immunostaining and/or interrogation of scRNAseq datasets revealed that transitional cells in mouse models of physiologic regeneration, ARDS, and fibrosis express markers of cell cycle exit but only in fibrosis express a specific senescence marker. Thus, in severe, fatal early ARDS, AEC1 differentiation from transitional cells is incomplete, underlying persistent barrier permeability and respiratory failure, but ongoing without fibrosis; senescence of transitional cells may be associated with pulmonary fibrosis.
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