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Plasticity in airway smooth muscle differentiation during mouse lung development

Developmental Cell, ISSN: 1534-5807, Vol: 58, Issue: 5, Page: 338-347.e4
2023
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Studies from Princeton University Reveal New Findings on Life Science (Plasticity In Airway Smooth Muscle Differentiation During Mouse Lung Development)

2023 APR 28 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Ivy League Daily News -- A new study on Life Science is now

Article Description

It has been proposed that smooth muscle differentiation may physically sculpt airway epithelial branches in mammalian lungs. Serum response factor (SRF) acts with its co-factor myocardin to activate the expression of contractile smooth muscle markers. In the adult, however, smooth muscle exhibits a variety of phenotypes beyond contractile, and these are independent of SRF/myocardin-induced transcription. To determine whether a similar phenotypic plasticity is exhibited during development, we deleted Srf from the mouse embryonic pulmonary mesenchyme. Srf -mutant lungs branch normally, and the mesenchyme displays mechanical properties indistinguishable from controls. scRNA-seq identified an Srf -null smooth muscle cluster, wrapping the airways of mutant lungs, which lacks contractile smooth muscle markers but retains many features of control smooth muscle. Srf- null embryonic airway smooth muscle exhibits a synthetic phenotype, compared with the contractile phenotype of mature wild-type airway smooth muscle. Our findings identify plasticity in embryonic airway smooth muscle and demonstrate that a synthetic smooth muscle layer promotes airway branching morphogenesis.

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