The specific functional properties of a tissue are distributed amongst its component cell types. The various cells act coherently, as an ensemble, in order to execute a physiologic response. Modern approaches for identifying and dissecting novel physiologic mechanisms would benefit from an ability to identify specific cell types in live tissues that could then be imaged in real time. Current techniques require the use of fluorescent genetic reporters that are not only cumbersome, but which only allow the study of three or four cell types at a time. We report a non-invasive imaging modality that capitalizes on the endogenous autofluorescence signatures of the metabolic cofactors NAD(P)H and FAD. By marrying morphological characteristics with autofluorescence signatures, all seven of the airway epithelial cell types can be distinguished simultaneously in mouse tracheal explants in real time. Furthermore, we find that this methodology for direct cell type-specific identification avoids pitfalls associated with the use of ostensibly cell type-specific markers that are, in fact, altered by clinically relevant physiologic stimuli. Finally, we utilize this methodology to interrogate real-time physiology and identify dynamic secretory cell associated antigen passages (SAPs) that form in response to cholinergic stimulus. The identical process has been well documented in the intestine where the dynamic formation of SAPs and goblet cell associated antigen passages (GAPs) enable luminal antigen sampling. Airway secretory cells with SAPs are frequently juxtaposed to antigen presenting cells, suggesting that airway SAPs, like their intestinal counterparts, not only sample antigen but convey their cargo for immune cell processing.
Keywords: FAD; NADH; airway epithelia; autofluorescence; cell biology; goblet cell associated antigen passages; mouse; secretory cell associated antigen passages.
Imaging several cell types, at the same time, within a living tissue is no small endeavor. To do so, scientists usually have to perform genetic manipulations that make certain proteins in each cell type fluorescent and therefore easy to track. However, these approaches are cumbersome, limited, and often not applicable to intact human tissues. A possible alternative would be to make use of autofluorescence – the fact that certain molecules in living cells naturally fluoresce when exposed to a particular wavelength of light. For example, this is the case for NAD(P)H and FAD, two small molecules necessary for life’s biochemical processes, and whose intracellular levels and locations vary depending on cell type. In response, Shah, Hou et al. developed a new imaging technique that takes advantage of the unique autofluorescence signatures of NAD(P)H and FAD to distinguish between the seven different types of cells that line the surface of the airways of mice. Using their autofluorescence approach, Shah, Hou et al. were also able to discover a new role for secretory cells, which normally produce fluids, mucus and various proteins necessary for the lungs to work properly. The imaging experiments show that these cells could also sample material from the surface of the airway in a manner similar to how cells in the intestine take up material from the gut and pass their cargo to immune cells that mediate infection control or tolerance. Further studies should uncover more details about this new function of secretory lung cells. Other exciting discoveries may also emerge from researchers adopting the method developed by Shah, Hou et al. to examine a range of organs (both healthy and diseased), and attempting to apply it to human tissues.
© 2023, Shah, Hou et al.