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Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol 278: L165-L176, 2000;
1040-0605/00 $5.00
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Vol. 278, Issue 1, L165-L176, January 2000

Differentiated and functional human airway epithelium regeneration in tracheal xenografts

F. Dupuit, D. Gaillard, J. Hinnrasky, E. Mongodin, S. de Bentzmann, E. Copreni, and E. Puchelle

Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale Unité 514, Université de Reims, Institut Federatif de Recherche 53, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Maison Blanche, 51092 Reims Cedex, France

To investigate the regeneration process of a well-differentiated and functional human airway epithelium, we adapted an in vivo xenograft model in which adult human nasal epithelial cells adhere and progressively repopulate denuded rat tracheae grafted in nude mice. The proliferating activity, the degree of differentiation, and the barrier integrity of the repopulated epithelium were studied during the regeneration process at optical and ultrastructural levels with immunocytochemistry and a permeability tracer. Three days after implantation in nude mice, tracheal xenografts were partially repopulated with a flattened nonciliated and poorly differentiated leaky epithelium. By the end of the first week after the graft, cell proliferation produced on the entire surface of the rat trachea an epithelium that was stratified into multiple layers and tightly sealed. During successive weeks, cell proliferation dramatically decreased. Moreover, the epithelium became progressively columnar, secretory, ciliated, and transiently leaky. At 4-5 wk, a fully differentiated pseudostratified functional epithelial barrier impermeable to a low-molecular-weight tracer was reconstituted. The regeneration of a well-differentiated and functional human airway epithelium in rat tracheae grafted in nude mice includes several steps that mimic the regeneration dynamics of airway epithelium after injury.

cell proliferation; cell differentiation; epithelial barrier integrity; nude mice


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