Single cell profiling of human airway identifies tuft-ionocyte progenitor cells displaying cytokine-dependent differentiation bias in vitro.

Nature communications
Authors
Abstract

Human airways contain specialized rare epithelial cells including CFTR-rich ionocytes that regulate airway surface physiology and chemosensory tuft cells that produce asthma-associated inflammatory mediators. Here, using a lung cell atlas of 311,748 single cell RNA-Seq profiles, we identify 687 ionocytes (0.45%). In contrast to prior reports claiming a lack of ionocytes in the small airways, we demonstrate that ionocytes are present in small and large airways in similar proportions. Surprisingly, we find only 3 mature tuft cells (0.002%), and demonstrate that previously annotated tuft-like cells are instead highly replicative progenitor cells. These tuft-ionocyte progenitor (TIP) cells produce ionocytes as a default lineage. However, Type 2 and Type 17 cytokines divert TIP cell lineage in vitro, resulting in the production of mature tuft cells at the expense of ionocyte differentiation. Our dataset thus provides an updated understanding of airway rare cell composition, and further suggests that clinically relevant cytokines may skew the composition of disease-relevant rare cells.

Year of Publication
2025
Journal
Nature communications
Volume
16
Issue
1
Pages
5180
Date Published
06/2025
ISSN
2041-1723
DOI
10.1038/s41467-025-60441-w
PubMed ID
40467553
Links