| Literature DB >> 33915079 |
Naren P Tallapragada1, Hailey M Cambra1, Tomas Wald2, Samantha Keough Jalbert1, Diana M Abraham1, Ophir D Klein2, Allon M Klein3.
Abstract
How stem cells self-organize to form structured tissues is an unsolved problem. Intestinal organoids offer a model of self-organization as they generate stem cell zones (SCZs) of typical size even without a spatially structured environment. Here we examine processes governing the size of SCZs. We improve the viability and homogeneity of intestinal organoid cultures to enable long-term time-lapse imaging of multiple organoids in parallel. We find that SCZs are shaped by fission events under strong control of ion channel-mediated inflation and mechanosensitive Piezo-family channels. Fission occurs through stereotyped modes of dynamic behavior that differ in their coordination of budding and differentiation. Imaging and single-cell transcriptomics show that inflation drives acute stem cell differentiation and induces a stretch-responsive cell state characterized by large transcriptional changes, including upregulation of Piezo1. Our results reveal an intrinsic capacity of the intestinal epithelium to self-organize by modulating and then responding to its mechanical state.Entities:
Keywords: intestinal stem cells; live imaging; mechanobiology; organoids; self-organization; size control; stretch-responsive cell
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33915079 PMCID: PMC8419000 DOI: 10.1016/j.stem.2021.04.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Stem Cell ISSN: 1875-9777 Impact factor: 25.269