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Preprints

Isthmus progenitor cells contribute to homeostatic cellular turnover and support regeneration following intestinal injury

Malagola E, Vasciaveo A, Ochiai Y, Kim W, Middelhoff M, Nienhüser H, Deng L, Belin B, LaBella J, Zamechek L, Wong M, Li L, Guha C, Cheng C, Yan K, Califano A, Wang T.
Preprint from
bioRxiv
28 April 2022
PPR
PPR486748
Abstract

Summary

The currently accepted intestinal epithelial cell organization model proposes that crypt base columnar (CBC) cells marked by high levels of Lgr5 expression represent the sole intestinal stem cell (ISC) compartment. However, previous studies have indicated that Lgr5 + cells are dispensable for intestinal regeneration, leading to two major hypotheses: one favoring the presence of a quiescent reserve stem cell population, the other calling for differentiated cell plasticity. To investigate these possibilities, we studied crypt epithelial cell organization, during homeostasis and regeneration, in unbiased fashion, via high-resolution single-cell profiling. These studies, combined with in vivo lineage tracing, show that Lgr5 is not a specific ISC marker and that stemness potential exists beyond the crypt base in the isthmus region, whose cells, contrary to differentiated cells, participate in tissue homeostasis and support intestinal regeneration. Our results provide a novel model of organization for the intestinal crypt epithelium in which stemness potential is not restricted to CBC cells and suggesting that neither de-differentiation nor reserve stem cell populations are drivers of intestinal regeneration.