| Literature DB >> 32025032 |
Si Hui Tan1, Yada Swathi1, Shawna Tan1, Jasmine Goh1, Ryo Seishima1, Kazuhiro Murakami2, Masanobu Oshima3, Toshikatsu Tsuji4, Phyllis Phuah1, Liang Thing Tan1, Esther Wong1, Aliya Fatehullah1, Taotao Sheng5,6, Shamaine Wei Ting Ho5,7, Heike I Grabsch8,9, Supriya Srivastava10,11, Ming Teh10, Simon L I J Denil12, Seri Mustafah13, Patrick Tan5,14, Asim Shabbir15, Jimmy So15, Khay Guan Yeoh16, Nick Barker17,18,19.
Abstract
LGR5 marks resident adult epithelial stem cells at the gland base in the mouse pyloric stomach1, but the identity of the equivalent human stem cell population remains unknown owing to a lack of surface markers that facilitate its prospective isolation and validation. In mouse models of intestinal cancer, LGR5+ intestinal stem cells are major sources of cancer following hyperactivation of the WNT pathway2. However, the contribution of pyloric LGR5+ stem cells to gastric cancer following dysregulation of the WNT pathway-a frequent event in gastric cancer in humans3-is unknown. Here we use comparative profiling of LGR5+ stem cell populations along the mouse gastrointestinal tract to identify, and then functionally validate, the membrane protein AQP5 as a marker that enriches for mouse and human adult pyloric stem cells. We show that stem cells within the AQP5+ compartment are a source of WNT-driven, invasive gastric cancer in vivo, using newly generated Aqp5-creERT2 mouse models. Additionally, tumour-resident AQP5+ cells can selectively initiate organoid growth in vitro, which indicates that this population contains potential cancer stem cells. In humans, AQP5 is frequently expressed in primary intestinal and diffuse subtypes of gastric cancer (and in metastases of these subtypes), and often displays altered cellular localization compared with healthy tissue. These newly identified markers and mouse models will be an invaluable resource for deciphering the early formation of gastric cancer, and for isolating and characterizing human-stomach stem cells as a prerequisite for harnessing the regenerative-medicine potential of these cells in the clinic.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32025032 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-1973-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962