Breathing easier with lung regeneration

Thursday, October 27, 2011 - 11:00 in Health & Medicine

Guided by insights into how mice recover after H1N1 flu, researchers at Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital, together with researchers at A*STAR of Singapore, have cloned three distinct stem cells from the human airways and demonstrated that one of these cells can form into the lung’s alveoli air sac tissue. What’s more, the researchers showed that these same lung stem cells are rapidly deployed in a dynamic process of lung regeneration to combat damage from infection or chronic disease. “These findings suggest new cell- and factor-based strategies for enhancing lung regeneration following acute damage from infection, and even in chronic conditions such as pulmonary fibrosis,” said Frank McKeon, professor of cell biology at Harvard Medical School (HMS). Other senior authors on the paper include Wa Xian of the Institute of Medical Biology in Singapore and Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and Christopher Crum, director of women’s and perinatal pathology...

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