TemporalSpatial Distribution of Hepatocyte Nuclear Factor-3ß in Developing Human Lung and Other Foregut DerivativesMildred T. Stahlmana, Mary E. Grayb, and Jeffrey A. Whitsettca Division of Neonatology, Departments of Pediatrics, Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio b Pathology, Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio c Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee, and Division of Neonatology and Pulmonary Biology, Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio Correspondence to: Mildred T. Stahlman, Vanderbilt U. Medical Center, Dept. of Pediatrics/Div. of Neonatology, A-0109 Medical Center North, Nashville, TN 37232-2370.
We assessed the temporalspatial distribution of hepatocyte nuclear factor-3ß (HNF-3ß) in developing human lung and other foregut derivatives. Tissue from 31 fetuses (1040 weeks) and 24 infants with hyaline membrane disease (HMD) or bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) (2 days to 7 months) was studied. HNF-3ß was detected in nuclei of epithelial cells of trachea and of conducting and terminal airways at 10 weeks. Thereafter, epithelial nuclei were immunolabeled more widely in peripheral than proximal airways. HNF-3ß was confined to bronchioloalveolar portals and Type II cells in nonfetal lung. In infants with BPD, HNF-3ß was expressed abundantly in regenerating epithelial cells at the periphery of lung lobules. HNF-3ß was also detected in fetal esophagus, pancreas, duodenum, stomach, and gallbladder, suggesting that it is a marker for progenitor cells in foregut derivatives. The pattern of expression of HNF-3ß in the lung was similar to that of thyroid transcription factor-1 (TTF-1) at all ages. The temporalspatial patterns of HNF-3ß and TTF-1 in the developing and regenerating lung are consistent with their proposed role in epithelial cell differentiation, regeneration, and surfactant protein gene expression. (J Histochem Cytochem 46:955962, 1998) Key Words: TTF-1, surfactant-associated proteins, CCSP, regenerating lung
Recent work from this laboratory and others supports the importance of several transcription factors, specifically HNF-3 and TTF-1, in the formation of foregut endoderm, including the respiratory tract (
HNF-3ß and/or TTF-1 regulate genes critical to perinatal surfactant homeostasis and host defense, including surfactant proteins A, B, and C and CCSP (
This study was approved by the Committee for the Protection of Human Subjects, Health Sciences of Vanderbilt University Review Board. Lung tissue was available from 31 fetuses between 10 and 40 weeks of gestation, from six infants dying with HMD between 2.5 and 10 postnatal days, from 14 infants of 1235 days after HMD (early BPD), of which two were lobectomy specimens, and from four infants between 5 and 7 months of postnatal age with late BPD. Tissues were obtained with parental consent between 1979 and 1991 at hysterotomy abortion, hysterectomy abortion, postmortem biopsy, or autopsy. Tracheas were available from 13 fetuses between 10 and 23 weeks of gestation, four for immunostaining also with TTF-1. Esophagi were also available from eight of the same fetuses. A limited number of other fetal and neonatal tissues were also available for study including eight pancreases, three stomachs, four duodenums, two gallbladders, four livers, two testes and epididymes, one skin with hair follicles and sebaceous glands, four large intestines, four kidneys, one adrenal, eight thyroids and two umbilical cords. Tissue from some older subjects was used for comparison, including four lungs, three pancreases, one adrenal, one submandibular gland, one liver, one brain, two esophagi, two stomachs, two large intestines, two kidneys, one thyroid, two vaginas, and one skin, including sweat and sebaceous glands. Fetal tissue was obtained within 30 min and autopsy specimens were usually obtained within 2 hr after death. Tissues were fixed in 10% phosphate-buffered formalin, dehydrated through ethanols, and embedded in paraffin. Four-µm-thick sections were cut and mounted on Superfrost Plus (Fisher; Norcross, GA) glass slides.
Immunohistochemistry Normal rabbit serum was substituted for the primary antiserum as a negative control. An anti-human cytokeratin antibody to CAM 5.2 (BectonDickinson; San Jose, CA) was used as a ubiquitous protein to demonstrate that the distribution of antigen was not an artifact of antibody accessibility. HNF-3ß labeling was ablated by substituting HNF-3ß antibody preabsorbed with affinity purified GST- HNF-3ß (aa 7-86 fusion protein) for the primary antibody. The surface of each section was examined microscopically by two of the authors independently, and the relative number and distribution of labeled cell nuclei were agreed on.
Localization of HNF-3ß and TTF-1 in Fetal Human Respiratory Tract
In general, the intensity of HNF-3ß and TTF-1 staining of terminal airways and cuboidal bronchiolar epithelium, especially those at the periphery of lobules and abutting septa, was more pronounced than in more proximal airways, especially in older fetuses. By 36 weeks of gestation, minimal labeling for HNF-3ß and TTF-1 was observed in the conducting airways at all levels, whereas nuclei of Type II cells in terminal airways remained well stained (Figure 4). In lungs from older subjects, HNF-3ß was detected only in some cells lining bronchiolo-alveolar portals and in Type II cells. Immunolabeling of the lung with TTF-1 closely matched that of HNF-3ß, the distribution of labeled nuclei being remarkably similar at all stages of gestation (
Localization of HNF-3ß and TTF-1 in Regenerating Epithelium in HMD
Localization of HNF-3ß and TTF-1 in Respiratory Epithelium in BPD Tissue was available from four infants with BPD obtained between 5 and 7 months of postnatal age. Lungs from these infants were scarred extensively and the airways were lined by dysplastic cells. Infection and widespread interstitial collagen deposition were noted in all samples. Only rare basal cells labeled with TTF-1 and HNF-3ß antisera were seen in large bronchioles in these infants. Some labeled cells were noted in cuboidal bronchioles and in terminal airways lined with dysplastic Type II cells. In the lungs of sick infants the prevalence and distribution of nuclear labeling for TTF-1 closely matched those for HNF-3ß. Substitution of preabsorbed antibody for the primary antibody resulted in ablation of the label for HNF-3ß in fetuses and BPD infants (Figure 7a and Figure 7b).
Localization of HNF-3ß and TTF-1 in Nonpulmonary Organs and in Older Subjects
Immunolabeling of HNF-3ß, TTF-1, SP-A, proSP-B, proSP-C, and CCSP
Esophagus. One 12-week fetus and the 15-week fetus in whom the esophagus was available had some scattered cells immunolabeled for all six antisera, but these were more sparse than those labeled in the trachea (Figure 13 Figure 14 Figure 15 Figure 16). Esophageal epithelial cells labeled for HNF-3ß, TTF-1, and proSP-B were located in basal regions. Those labeled for CCSP were primarily cells flanking folds. By 20 weeks of gestation, the esophagus was lined with stratified squamous epithelium and immunolabeling with these antibodies was no longer seen.
Conducting and Terminal Airways.
In the conducting airways of younger fetuses, CCSP was seen only as "crowns" of cuboidal cells adjacent to or over the surface of neuroepithelial bodies (NEBs). TTF-1 and HNF-3ß were also detected in these locations and in other epithelial lining cells. NEB cells were not immunolabeled in this series of fetuses by these antisera. In older fetuses, CCSP was seen in subsets of isolated cells in the conducting airways but was not seen in terminal airways at any gestational age ( In the lungs of infants with early BPD, a few isolated cells were immunolabeled for CCSP, while in airways lined by columnar epithelium, clusters of CCSP labeled cells were observed in association with unlabeled NEBs. In bronchioles and in terminal airways, dysplastic relining cells were immunolabeled with HNF-3ß and TTF-1, fewer lining cells immunolabeled for proSP-B, and rare cells for SP-A.
The temporalspatial distribution of HNF-3ß was determined in developing human tissues, including the lung. The localization and developmental changes in HNF-3ß and TTF-1 are consistent with their interacting roles in commitment of foregut endodermal cell differentiation. Later in development, these transcriptional proteins are likely involved in the regulation of target genes, including those of surfactant proteins and CCSP, critical to postnatal lung function. Both transcriptional factors are expressed in subsets of cells believed to be nonterminally differentiated or potential progenitor cells and are excluded during the process of respiratory epithelial cell divergence and terminal differentiation. The overlapping distribution of HNF-3ß and TTF-1 in early fetal trachea and esophagus is consistent with a role of these transcription factors as markers for common progenitor cells, contributing to the function of both organs.
Very immature mice have shown immunolabeling of all epithelial cells of distal airways with CGRP, CC-10, and SP-A, and later the emergence of staining of differentiated cell types ( The expression of HNF-3ß and TTF-1 was distributed widely in regions of the lung undergoing regeneration after injury. Whereas HNF-3ß and TTF-1 were lost consistently in areas of squamous metaplasia and severe lung injury in infants with HMD and BPD, labeling was observed for both proteins in regions undergoing regeneration, often most apparent abutting pleural surfaces and lobar septa. Regions lacking HNF-3ß stained with cytokeratin CAM 5.2, demonstrating that antibody accessibility was preserved in these areas. The presence of TTF-1 and HNF-3ß in the relining cell population may therefore represent the recapitulation of transcriptional signaling that was also observed during development. HNF-3ß was detected in various nonpulmonary tissues, all derivatives of the foregut endoderm. HNF-3ß overlapped with TTF-1 in the lung but only transiently in the esophagus and not in other nonpulmonary tissues. Expression of HNF-3ß in basal cells of the esophagus and in the stomach and duodenum is also consistent with a potential role in commitment of progenitor cells to certain cell lineages in the developing gastrointestinal tract. A developmental role for HNF-3ß is also suggested in that immunolabeling was absent from nonpulmonary tissues of older subjects.
The pattern of increasing restriction of HNF-3ß in endodermal tissues during advancing human development is similar to that in the developing mouse. HNF-3ß was detected in the mouse CNS and in tissues derived from foregut endoderm, including the lung, esophagus, small intestine, and pancreas (
HNF-3ß binds to consensus elements present in a number of genes expressed in foregut endodermal tissues, including those of CCSP and surfactant proteins in the lung ( Serial sections of tracheas showed the expression of HNF-3ß and TTF-1 in subsets of cells, including basal cells, consistent with the known role of both transcription factors in the activation of genes for SP-A, proSP-B, proSP-C, and CCSP. These findings support the concept of shared precursors for the cells expressing these markers. Subsets of cells in the esophagi of early fetuses were also labeled with these antisera. Expression of these proteins was lost in trachea and esophagus with increasing divergence and commitment to differentiated cell phenotypes. In summary, the temporalspatial distribution of HNF-3ß was assessed in developing human lung and other foregut-derived tissues. HNF-3ß was found in the first trimester in subsets of cells that also expressed TTF-1, SP-A, proSP-B, proSP-C, and CCSP in the lung, the trachea, and the esophagus. Expression of both HNF-3ß and TTF-1 was increasingly restricted to the distal airways during differentiation. HNF-3ß was restricted ultimately to Type II epithelial cells in the postnatal lung and was absent in extrapulmonary tissues. The present studies support the concept that cells expressing HNF-3ß and TTF-1 share a close lineage relationship early in development, with disappearance of expression correlating with divergence of cell phenotypes. The persistence of immunolabeling of cuboidal relining cells and Type II cells suggests that HNF-3ß and TTF-1 also play a role in influencing cell differentiation and gene expression in the process of repair of the postnatal lung.
Supported by HL56387 SCOR and HL14214 SCOR. We thank Dr Robert Costa of the University of Chicago (Chicago, Illinois) for the use of the antibody generated against recombinant HNF-3ß and Dr Gurmukh Singh of Veterans Affairs Medical Center (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) for the use of the antibody generated against CCSP. We also thank Ms Sandra Olson and Mr Fred Morris for expert technical assistance, Mr Brent Weedman for photographic assistance, Mr Robert Vantrease for assistance with illustrations, and Ms Nancy L. Hanna for preparation of the manuscript. Received for publication June 4, 1997; accepted March 25, 1998.
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