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Preprints

Bi-compartmentalized stem cell organization of the corneal limbal niche

Farrelly O, Suzuki-Horiuchi Y, Brewster M, Kuri P, Huang S, Huang S, Rice G, Xu J, Dentchev T, Lee V, Rompolas P.
Preprint from
bioRxiv
26 June 2020
PPR
PPR180818
Abstract
Stem cells exist in precise locations within tissues, yet how their organization supports tissue architecture and function is poorly understood. The limbus is the presumptive stem cell niche of the corneal epithelium. Here, we visualize the live limbus and track the activity of single stem cells in their native environment by 2-photon microscopy. We identify previously unknown niche compartments and show that long implicated slow-cycling cells form separate lineages in the outer limbus, with only local clonal dynamics. Instead, we find distinct stem cells in the pericorneal limbus to be required for corneal regeneration. Unbiased photolabeling captures their progeny exiting the niche, then moving centripetally in unison before undergoing terminal differentiation. This study demonstrates how a compartmentalized stem cell organization coordinates tissue regeneration.

One Sentence Summary

In vivo live imaging of the regenerating cornea reveals distinct stem cell activities in the limbal niche