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Aerocyte specification and lung adaptation to breathing is dependent on alternative splicing changes.

Marta Alves FidalgoCatarina Gonçalves FonsecaPaulo CaldasAlexandre Asf RaposoTania BalboniLenka Henao-MišíkováAna Rita GrossoFrancisca Ferreira VasconcelosClaudio Areias Franco
Published in: Life science alliance (2022)
Adaptation to breathing is a critical step in lung function and it is crucial for organismal survival. Alveoli are the lung gas exchange units and their development, from late embryonic to early postnatal stages, requires feedbacks between multiple cell types. However, how the crosstalk between the alveolar cell types is modulated to anticipate lung adaptation to breathing is still unclear. Here, we uncovered a synchronous alternative splicing switch in multiple genes in the developing mouse lungs at the transition to birth, and we identified hnRNP A1, Cpeb4, and Elavl2/HuB as putative splicing regulators of this transition. Notably, we found that <i>Vegfa</i> switches from the <i>Vegfa</i> 164 isoform to the longer <i>Vegfa</i> 188 isoform exclusively in lung alveolar epithelial AT1 cells. Functional analysis revealed that VEGFA 188 (and not VEGFA 164) drives the specification of Car4-positive aerocytes, a subtype of alveolar endothelial cells specialized in gas exchanges. Our results reveal that the cell type-specific regulation of <i>Vegfa</i> alternative splicing just before birth modulates the epithelial-endothelial crosstalk in the developing alveoli to promote lung adaptation to breathing.
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