Resident cellular components of the human lung current knowledge and goals for research on cell phenotyping and function Journal Article


Authors: Franks, T. J.; Colby, T. V.; Travis, W. D.; Tuder, R. M.; Reynolds, H. Y.; Brody, A. R.; Cardoso, W. V.; Crystal, R. G.; Drake, C. J.; Engelhardt, J.; Frid, M.; Herzog, E.; Mason, R.; Phan, S. H.; Randell, S. H.; Rose, M. C.; Stevens, T.; Serge, J.; Sunday, M. E.; Voynow, J. A.; Weinstein, B. M.; Whitsett, J.; Williams, M. C.
Article Title: Resident cellular components of the human lung current knowledge and goals for research on cell phenotyping and function
Abstract: The purpose of the workshop was to identify still obscure or novel cellular components of the lung, to determine cell function in lung development and in health that impacts on disease, and to decide promising avenues for future research to extract and phenotype these cells. Since robust technologies are now available to identify, sort, purify, culture, and phenotype cells, progress is now within sight to unravel the origins and functional capabilities of lung cells in developmental stages and in disease. The Workshop's agenda was to first discuss the lung's embryologic development, including progenitor and stem cells, and then assess the functional and structural cells in three main compartments of the lung: (1) airway cells in bronchial and bronchiolar epithelium and bronchial glands (basal, secretory, ciliated, Clara, and neuroendocrine cells); (2) alveolar unit cells (Type 1 cells, Type 2 cells, and fibroblasts in the interstitium); and (3) pulmonary vascular cells (endothelial cells from different vascular structures, smooth muscle cells, and adventitial fibroblasts). The main recommendations were to: (1) characterize with better cell markers, both surface and nonsurface, the various cells within the lung, including progenitor cells and stem cells; (2) obtain more knowledge about gene expression in specific cell types in health and disease, which will provide insights into biological and pathologic processes; (3) develop more methodologies for cell culture, isolation, sorting, co-culture, and immortalization; and (4) promote tissue banks to facilitate the procurement of tissue from normal and from diseased lung for analysis at all levels.
Keywords: human cell; conference paper; phenotype; cell function; cell structure; smooth muscle fiber; biomedical research; congresses as topic; gene expression; lung disease; embryo development; stem cell; endothelium cell; cell culture; cell isolation; lung; fibroblast; bronchus mucosa; cell selection; coculture; lung diseases; neurosecretory cell; cell immortalization; cell markers; culture methods; novel cells; progenitor or stem cells; clara cell; lung alveolus cell; lung alveolus cell type 2; lung development
Journal Title: Proceedings of the American Thoracic Society
Volume: 5
Issue: 7
ISSN: 1546-3222
Publisher: American Thoracic Society  
Date Published: 2008-09-15
Start Page: 763
End Page: 766
Language: English
DOI: 10.1513/pats.200803-025HR
PUBMED: 18757314
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Cited By (since 1996): 9" - "Export Date: 17 November 2011" - "Source: Scopus"
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  1. William D Travis
    743 Travis