HCA Data Explorer

Allergic inflammatory memory in human respiratory epithelial progenitor cells

Updated August 23, 2023

Barrier tissue dysfunction is a fundamental feature of chronic human inflammatory diseases. Specialized subsets of epithelial cells-including secretory and ciliated cells-differentiate from basal stem cells to collectively protect the upper airway. Allergic inflammation can develop from persistent activation of type 2 immunity in the upper airway, resulting in chronic rhinosinusitis, which ranges in severity from rhinitis to severe nasal polyps. Basal cell hyperplasia is a hallmark of severe disease, but it is not known how these progenitor cells contribute to clinical presentation and barrier tissue dysfunction in humans. Here we profile primary human surgical chronic rhinosinusitis samples (18,036 cells, n = 12) that span the disease spectrum using Seq-Well for massively parallel single-cell RNA sequencing, report transcriptomes for human respiratory epithelial, immune and stromal cell types and subsets from a type 2 inflammatory disease, and map key mediators. By comparison with nasal scrapings (18,704 cells, n = 9), we define signatures of core, healthy, inflamed and polyp secretory cells. We reveal marked differences between the epithelial compartments of the non-polyp and polyp cellular ecosystems, identifying and validating a global reduction in cellular diversity of polyps characterized by basal cell hyperplasia, concomitant decreases in glandular cells, and phenotypic shifts in secretory cell antimicrobial expression. We detect an aberrant basal progenitor differentiation trajectory in polyps, and propose cell-intrinsic, epigenetic and extrinsic factors that lock polyp basal cells into this uncommitted state. Finally, we functionally demonstrate that ex vivo cultured basal cells retain intrinsic memory of IL-4/IL-13 exposure, and test the potential for clinical blockade of the IL-4 receptor α-subunit to modify basal and secretory cell states in vivo. Overall, we find that reduced epithelial diversity stemming from functional shifts in basal cells is a key characteristic of type 2 immune-mediated barrier tissue dysfunction. Our results demonstrate that epithelial stem cells may contribute to the persistence of human disease by serving as repositories for allergic memories.

Nora A BarrettBrigham and Women's Hospitalnbarrett@bwh.harvard.edu
Alex K ShalekMassachusetts Institute of Technologyshalek@mit.edu
Jose Ordovas-Montanes1
Daniel F Dwyer2
Sarah K Nyquist1
Kathleen M Buchheit2
Marko Vukovic1
Chaarushena Deb1
Marc H Wadsworth1
Travis K Hughes1
Samuel W Kazer1
Eri Yoshimoto2
Katherine N Cahill2
Neil Bhattacharyya3
Howard R Katz2
Bonnie Berger1
Tanya M Laidlaw2
Joshua A Boyce2
Nora A Barrett2
Alex K Shalek1
1Massachusetts Institute of Technology
2Brigham and Women's Hospital
3Harvard Medical School
Ida Zucchi

To reference this project, please use the following link:

https://explore.data.humancellatlas.org/projects/326b36bd-0975-475f-983b-56ddb8f73a4d

Supplementary links are provided by contributors and represent items such as additional data which can’t be hosted here; code that was used to analyze this data; or tools and visualizations associated with this specific dataset.

1.http://shaleklab.com/resources/
None

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Analysis Portals

None

Project Label

AllergicInflammatoryMemory

Species

Homo sapiens

Sample Type

specimens

Anatomical Entity

nose

Organ Part

2 organ parts

Selected Cell Types

Unspecified

Disease Status (Specimen)

2 disease statuses

Disease Status (Donor)

3 disease statuses

Development Stage

human adult stage

Library Construction Method

Seq-Well

Nucleic Acid Source

single cell

Paired End

false

Analysis Protocol

raw_matrix_generation

File Format

2 file formats

Cell Count Estimate

36.7k

Donor Count

18
txt.gz4 file(s)xlsx1 file(s)