@article{1471, keywords = {Alveolar Epithelial Cells, Cell Differentiation, Cell Lineage, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Lung, NKX2.1, NOTUM, organoids, Respiratory Tract Diseases, WNT, alveolar differentiation, alveolar patterning, distal tip, human lung development, organoids, Stem cell}, author = {Kyungtae Lim and Alex P. A. Donovan and Walfred Tang and Dawei Sun and Peng He and J. Patrick Pett and Sarah A. Teichmann and John C. Marioni and Kerstin B. Meyer and Andrea H. Brand and Emma L. Rawlins}, title = {Organoid modeling of human fetal lung alveolar development reveals mechanisms of cell fate patterning and neonatal respiratory disease}, abstract = {Variation in lung alveolar development is strongly linked to disease susceptibility. However, underlying cellular and molecular mechanisms are difficult to study in humans. We have identified an alveolar-fated epithelial progenitor in human fetal lungs, which we grow as self-organizing organoids that model key aspects of cell lineage commitment. Using this system, we have functionally validated cell-cell interactions in the developing human alveolar niche, showing that Wnt signaling from differentiating fibroblasts promotes alveolar-type-2 cell identity, whereas myofibroblasts secrete the Wnt inhibitor, NOTUM, providing spatial patterning. We identify a Wnt-NKX2.1 axis controlling alveolar differentiation. Moreover, we show that differential binding of NKX2.1 coordinates alveolar maturation, allowing us to model the effects of human genetic variation in NKX2.1 on alveolar differentiation. Our organoid system recapitulates key aspects of human fetal lung stem cell biology allowing mechanistic experiments to determine the cellular and molecular regulation of human development and disease.}, year = {2023}, journal = {Cell Stem Cell}, volume = {30}, pages = {20-37.e9}, month = {2023-01-05}, issn = {1875-9777}, doi = {10.1016/j.stem.2022.11.013}, language = {eng}, }