| Literature DB >> 35728595 |
Rachel E Niec1, Tinyi Chu2, Marina Schernthanner3, Shiri Gur-Cohen3, Lynette Hidalgo3, Hilda Amalia Pasolli4, Kathleen A Luckett5, Zhong Wang6, Sohni R Bhalla7, Francesco Cambuli8, Raghu P Kataru9, Karuna Ganesh10, Babak J Mehrara9, Dana Pe'er11, Elaine Fuchs12.
Abstract
Barrier epithelia depend upon resident stem cells for homeostasis, defense, and repair. Epithelial stem cells of small and large intestines (ISCs) respond to their local microenvironments (niches) to fulfill a continuous demand for tissue turnover. The complexity of these niches and underlying communication pathways are not fully known. Here, we report a lymphatic network at the intestinal crypt base that intimately associates with ISCs. Employing in vivo loss of function and lymphatic:organoid cocultures, we show that crypt lymphatics maintain ISCs and inhibit their precocious differentiation. Pairing single-cell and spatial transcriptomics, we apply BayesPrism to deconvolve expression within spatial features and develop SpaceFold to robustly map the niche at high resolution, exposing lymphatics as a central signaling hub for the crypt in general and ISCs in particular. We identify WNT-signaling factors (WNT2, R-SPONDIN-3) and a hitherto unappreciated extracellular matrix protein, REELIN, as crypt lymphatic signals that directly govern the regenerative potential of ISCs.Entities:
Keywords: REELIN; RSPO3; WNTs; intestinal stem cells; lymphatic:stem cell interactome; lymphatics; organoids; spatial deconvolution; spatial transcriptomics of murine large and small intestine; stem cell niches
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35728595 PMCID: PMC9271639 DOI: 10.1016/j.stem.2022.05.007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Stem Cell ISSN: 1875-9777 Impact factor: 25.269