| Literature DB >> 20049728 |
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Year: 2009 PMID: 20049728 PMCID: PMC3378138 DOI: 10.1002/emmm.200900034
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EMBO Mol Med ISSN: 1757-4676 Impact factor: 12.137
Figure 1Stem cells of the small intestine
A single crypt stem cell is labeled blue when a tamoxifen injection activates a LacZ-Cre reporter in an Lgr5 stem cell. Paneth cells are orange, all transit amplifying cells in brown. Differentiated cells (pink) first appear when cells exit the crypt.
The offspring of the labeled stem cell is recognizable by the blue stain. It moves up the villus and straight towards the tip of the adjacent villus, which is reached by about 5 days. This continuously renewing ‘blue ribbon’ remains present for the life time of the mouse, implying that the initial blue cell is indeed a stem cell.
Figure 2Lgr5 stem cells in cancer of the intestine
A normal crypt with Lgr5 stem cells in green, Paneth cells in orange, all transit amplifying cells in brown. Differentiated cells (pink) first appear when cells exit the crypt.
When APC is deleted in one of the stem cells, the offspring of the transformed stem cell continuously proliferates and fails to leave the crypt and differentiate. As a consequence a large, green adenoma forms.