| Literature DB >> 22464327 |
Anne E Powell1, Yang Wang, Yina Li, Emily J Poulin, Anna L Means, Mary K Washington, James N Higginbotham, Alwin Juchheim, Nripesh Prasad, Shawn E Levy, Yan Guo, Yu Shyr, Bruce J Aronow, Kevin M Haigis, Jeffrey L Franklin, Robert J Coffey.
Abstract
Lineage mapping has identified both proliferative and quiescent intestinal stem cells, but the molecular circuitry controlling stem cell quiescence is incompletely understood. By lineage mapping, we show Lrig1, a pan-ErbB inhibitor, marks predominately noncycling, long-lived stem cells that are located at the crypt base and that, upon injury, proliferate and divide to replenish damaged crypts. Transcriptome profiling of Lrig1(+) colonic stem cells differs markedly from the profiling of highly proliferative, Lgr5(+) colonic stem cells; genes upregulated in the Lrig1(+) population include those involved in cell cycle repression and response to oxidative damage. Loss of Apc in Lrig1(+) cells leads to intestinal adenomas, and genetic ablation of Lrig1 results in heightened ErbB1-3 expression and duodenal adenomas. These results shed light on the relationship between proliferative and quiescent intestinal stem cells and support a model in which intestinal stem cell quiescence is maintained by calibrated ErbB signaling with loss of a negative regulator predisposing to neoplasia.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22464327 PMCID: PMC3563328 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2012.02.042
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582