- Jackson, Nathan D;
- Everman, Jamie L;
- Chioccioli, Maurizio;
- Feriani, Luigi;
- Goldfarbmuren, Katherine C;
- Sajuthi, Satria P;
- Rios, Cydney L;
- Powell, Roger;
- Armstrong, Michael;
- Gomez, Joe;
- Michel, Cole;
- Eng, Celeste;
- Oh, Sam S;
- Rodriguez-Santana, Jose;
- Cicuta, Pietro;
- Reisdorph, Nichole;
- Burchard, Esteban G;
- Seibold, Max A
The type 2 cytokine-high asthma endotype (T2H) is characterized by IL-13-driven mucus obstruction of the airways. To further investigate this incompletely understood pathobiology, we characterize IL-13 effects on human airway epithelial cell cultures using single-cell RNA sequencing, finding that IL-13 generates a distinctive transcriptional state for each cell type. Specifically, we discover a mucus secretory program induced by IL-13 in all cell types which converts both mucus and defense secretory cells into a metaplastic state with emergent mucin production and secretion, while leading to ER stress and cell death in ciliated cells. The IL-13-remodeled epithelium secretes a pathologic, mucin-imbalanced, and innate immunity-depleted proteome that arrests mucociliary motion. Signatures of IL-13-induced cellular remodeling are mirrored by transcriptional signatures characteristic of the nasal airway epithelium within T2H versus T2-low asthmatic children. Our results reveal the epithelium-wide scope of T2H asthma and present candidate therapeutic targets for restoring normal epithelial function.