Abstract
Congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH) and congenital pulmonary airway malformation (CPAM) are two inborn pathologies of the lung of unknown origin. Alterations of gene expression in airway epithelial cells are involved in the pathobiology of both diseases. We previously found decreased expression of the epithelial cell adhesion protein cadherin 26 (CDH26) in hypoplastic mice lungs. Here, our objective was to describe the expression and localization of CDH26 in hypoplastic CDH lungs and hyperproliferative CPAM tissues. After ethical approval, we used human lung tissues from CDH and CPAM cases and age-matched control samples from a previously established biobank. Furthermore, lungs from the nitrofen rat model of CDH were included in the study. We performed immunohistochemistry and western blot analysis with antibodies against CDH26 to examine protein localization and abundance. Statistical analysis was performed using Mann-Whitney U test with significance set at p < 0.05. We observed an overexpression of CDH26 within the epithelium of cystic CPAM lesions compared to normal airways within the same lung and compared to control lungs. Western blot demonstrated a downregulation of CDH26 in the nitrofen rat model of CDH compared to healthy controls. Immunohistochemistry could not show consistent differences between CDH and control in human and rat lungs. In the studied human lung samples, CDH26 was localized to the apical part of the airway epithelial cells. CDH26 is differentially expressed in human CPAM lung tissues and may be downregulated in nitrofen-induced hypoplastic rat lungs compared to control lungs. Disruption of CDH26 associated pathways in lung development may be involved in the pathogenesis of lung hypoplasia or cystic lung disease.
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