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1.
Elife ; 122023 01 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36719070

ABSTRACT

Nutrient availability fluctuates in most natural populations, forcing organisms to undergo periods of fasting and re-feeding. It is unknown how dietary changes influence liver homeostasis. Here, we show that a switch from ad libitum feeding to intermittent fasting (IF) promotes rapid hepatocyte proliferation. Mechanistically, IF-induced hepatocyte proliferation is driven by the combined action of systemic FGF15 and localized WNT signaling. Hepatocyte proliferation during periods of fasting and re-feeding re-establishes a constant liver-to-body mass ratio, thus maintaining the hepatostat. This study provides the first example of dietary influence on adult hepatocyte proliferation and challenges the widely held view that liver tissue is mostly quiescent unless chemically or mechanically injured.


Subject(s)
Intermittent Fasting , Liver Regeneration , Mice , Animals , Liver , Fasting , Hepatocytes , Cell Proliferation
2.
Development ; 148(9)2021 05 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33914868

ABSTRACT

In mammalian ovaries, immature oocytes are reserved in primordial follicles until their activation for potential ovulation. Precise control of primordial follicle activation (PFA) is essential for reproduction, but how this is achieved is unclear. Here, we show that canonical wingless-type MMTV integration site family (WNT) signaling is pivotal for pre-granulosa cell (pre-GC) activation during PFA. We identified several WNT ligands expressed in pre-GCs that act in an autocrine manner. Inhibition of WNT secretion from pre-GCs/GCs by conditional knockout (cKO) of the wntless (Wls) gene led to female infertility. In Wls cKO mice, GC layer thickness was greatly reduced in growing follicles, which resulted in impaired oocyte growth with both an abnormal, sustained nuclear localization of forkhead box O3 (FOXO3) and reduced phosphorylation of ribosomal protein S6 (RPS6). Constitutive stabilization of ß-catenin (CTNNB1) in pre-GCs/GCs induced morphological changes of pre-GCs from a squamous into a cuboidal form, though it did not influence oocyte activation. Our results reveal that canonical WNT signaling plays a permissive role in the transition of pre-GCs to GCs, which is an essential step to support oocyte growth.


Subject(s)
Fertility , Granulosa Cells/metabolism , Infertility, Female/metabolism , Ovary/metabolism , Wnt Signaling Pathway , Animals , Female , Mice , Mice, Knockout , Oocytes/metabolism , Oogenesis , Ovarian Follicle/metabolism , Ovulation , Transcriptome , WT1 Proteins/genetics , beta Catenin/genetics
3.
Hepatology ; 69(6): 2623-2635, 2019 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30762896

ABSTRACT

In the liver, Wnt/ß-catenin signaling is involved in regulating zonation and hepatocyte proliferation during homeostasis. We examined Wnt gene expression and signaling after injury, and we show by in situ hybridization that Wnts are activated by acute carbon tetrachloride (CCl4 ) toxicity. Following injury, peri-injury hepatocytes become Wnt-responsive, expressing the Wnt target gene axis inhibition protein 2 (Axin2). Lineage tracing of peri-injury Axin2+ hepatocytes shows that during recovery the injured parenchyma becomes repopulated and repaired by Axin2+ descendants. Using single-cell RNA sequencing, we show that endothelial cells are the major source of Wnts following acute CCl4 toxicity. Induced loss of ß-catenin in peri-injury hepatocytes results in delayed repair and ultimately injury-induced lethality, while loss of Wnt production from endothelial cells leads to a delay in the proliferative response after injury. Conclusion: Our findings highlight the importance of the Wnt/ß-catenin signaling pathway in restoring tissue integrity following acute liver toxicity and establish a role of endothelial cells as an important Wnt-producing regulator of liver tissue repair following localized liver injury.


Subject(s)
Axin Protein/genetics , Liver Regeneration/genetics , Liver/injuries , Wnt Proteins/genetics , Wnt Signaling Pathway/genetics , beta Catenin/genetics , Animals , Biopsy, Needle , Carbon Tetrachloride/pharmacology , Cells, Cultured , Disease Models, Animal , Gene Expression/genetics , Hepatocytes/cytology , Immunohistochemistry , Liver/pathology , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Polymerase Chain Reaction/methods , RNA/genetics , Random Allocation , Reference Values
4.
Genes Dev ; 33(3-4): 209-220, 2019 02 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30692207

ABSTRACT

Spatiotemporal control of Wnt signaling is essential for the development and homeostasis of many tissues. The transmembrane E3 ubiquitin ligases ZNRF3 (zinc and ring finger 3) and RNF43 (ring finger protein 43) antagonize Wnt signaling by promoting degradation of frizzled receptors. ZNRF3 and RNF43 are frequently inactivated in human cancer, but the molecular and therapeutic implications remain unclear. Here, we demonstrate that adrenocortical-specific loss of ZNRF3, but not RNF43, results in adrenal hyperplasia that depends on Porcupine-mediated Wnt ligand secretion. Furthermore, we discovered a Wnt/ß-catenin signaling gradient in the adrenal cortex that is disrupted upon loss of ZNRF3. Unlike ß-catenin gain-of-function models, which induce high Wnt/ß-catenin activation and expansion of the peripheral cortex, ZNRF3 loss triggers activation of moderate-level Wnt/ß-catenin signaling that drives proliferative expansion of only the histologically and functionally distinct inner cortex. Genetically reducing ß-catenin dosage significantly reverses the ZNRF3-deficient phenotype. Thus, homeostatic maintenance of the adrenal cortex is dependent on varying levels of Wnt/ß-catenin activation, which is regulated by ZNRF3.


Subject(s)
Adrenal Cortex/metabolism , Homeostasis/genetics , Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases/metabolism , Wnt Signaling Pathway/physiology , beta Catenin/metabolism , Adrenal Cortex/cytology , Adrenal Cortex/growth & development , Adrenal Cortex Diseases/physiopathology , Animals , Cell Proliferation/genetics , Female , Gene Knockout Techniques , Male , Mice , Models, Animal , Transcriptional Activation/genetics , Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases/genetics
5.
Cell ; 175(6): 1607-1619.e15, 2018 11 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30500539

ABSTRACT

In the healthy adult liver, most hepatocytes proliferate minimally. However, upon physical or chemical injury to the liver, hepatocytes proliferate extensively in vivo under the direction of multiple extracellular cues, including Wnt and pro-inflammatory signals. Currently, liver organoids can be generated readily in vitro from bile-duct epithelial cells, but not hepatocytes. Here, we show that TNFα, an injury-induced inflammatory cytokine, promotes the expansion of hepatocytes in 3D culture and enables serial passaging and long-term culture for more than 6 months. Single-cell RNA sequencing reveals broad expression of hepatocyte markers. Strikingly, in vitro-expanded hepatocytes engrafted, and significantly repopulated, the injured livers of Fah-/- mice. We anticipate that tissue repair signals can be harnessed to promote the expansion of otherwise hard-to-culture cell-types, with broad implications.


Subject(s)
Antigens, Differentiation/biosynthesis , Cell Culture Techniques , Cell Proliferation/drug effects , Hepatocytes/metabolism , Spheroids, Cellular/metabolism , Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha/pharmacology , Animals , Cell Line, Transformed , Hep G2 Cells , Hepatocytes/transplantation , Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells , Humans , Liver/injuries , Liver/metabolism , Mice, Knockout , Spheroids, Cellular/transplantation , Time Factors
6.
Nature ; 548(7668): 451-455, 2017 08 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28813421

ABSTRACT

The constant regeneration of stomach epithelium is driven by long-lived stem cells, but the mechanism that regulates their turnover is not well understood. We have recently found that the gastric pathogen Helicobacter pylori can activate gastric stem cells and increase epithelial turnover, while Wnt signalling is known to be important for stem cell identity and epithelial regeneration in several tissues. Here we find that antral Wnt signalling, marked by the classic Wnt target gene Axin2, is limited to the base and lower isthmus of gastric glands, where the stem cells reside. Axin2 is expressed by Lgr5+ cells, as well as adjacent, highly proliferative Lgr5- cells that are able to repopulate entire glands, including the base, upon depletion of the Lgr5+ population. Expression of both Axin2 and Lgr5 requires stroma-derived R-spondin 3 produced by gastric myofibroblasts proximal to the stem cell compartment. Exogenous R-spondin administration expands and accelerates proliferation of Axin2+/Lgr5- but not Lgr5+ cells. Consistent with these observations, H. pylori infection increases stromal R-spondin 3 expression and expands the Axin2+ cell pool to cause hyperproliferation and gland hyperplasia. The ability of stromal niche cells to control and adapt epithelial stem cell dynamics constitutes a sophisticated mechanism that orchestrates epithelial regeneration and maintenance of tissue integrity.


Subject(s)
Helicobacter Infections/metabolism , Homeostasis , Stem Cells/cytology , Stem Cells/metabolism , Stomach/cytology , Stromal Cells/metabolism , Thrombospondins/metabolism , Animals , Axin Protein/metabolism , Cell Proliferation , Epithelial Cells/cytology , Helicobacter Infections/microbiology , Helicobacter Infections/pathology , Helicobacter pylori/pathogenicity , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Myofibroblasts/cytology , Myofibroblasts/metabolism , Pyloric Antrum/metabolism , Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled/metabolism , Stem Cell Niche , Stromal Cells/cytology , Wnt Signaling Pathway
7.
Nature ; 524(7564): 180-5, 2015 Aug 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26245375

ABSTRACT

The source of new hepatocytes in the uninjured liver has remained an open question. By lineage tracing using the Wnt-responsive gene Axin2 in mice, we identify a population of proliferating and self-renewing cells adjacent to the central vein in the liver lobule. These pericentral cells express the early liver progenitor marker Tbx3, are diploid, and thereby differ from mature hepatocytes, which are mostly polyploid. The descendants of pericentral cells differentiate into Tbx3-negative, polyploid hepatocytes, and can replace all hepatocytes along the liver lobule during homeostatic renewal. Adjacent central vein endothelial cells provide Wnt signals that maintain the pericentral cells, thereby constituting the niche. Thus, we identify a cell population in the liver that subserves homeostatic hepatocyte renewal, characterize its anatomical niche, and identify molecular signals that regulate its activity.


Subject(s)
Axin Protein/metabolism , Diploidy , Hepatocytes/cytology , Hepatocytes/metabolism , Homeostasis , Liver/cytology , Animals , Biomarkers/metabolism , Cell Lineage , Cell Proliferation , Clone Cells/cytology , Clone Cells/metabolism , Endothelial Cells/metabolism , Female , Liver/blood supply , Male , Mice , Polyploidy , Regeneration , Staining and Labeling , Stem Cell Niche/physiology , Stem Cells/cytology , Stem Cells/metabolism , T-Box Domain Proteins/deficiency , T-Box Domain Proteins/metabolism , Time Factors , Veins/cytology , Veins/metabolism , Wnt Signaling Pathway
8.
Bioessays ; 37(9): 1028-37, 2015 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26201286

ABSTRACT

The application of in vivo genetic lineage tracing has advanced our understanding of cellular mechanisms for tissue renewal in organs with slow turnover, like the lung. These studies have identified an adult stem cell with very different properties than classically understood ones that maintain continuously cycling tissues such as the intestine. A portrait has emerged of an ensemble of cellular programs that replenish the cells that line the gas exchange (alveolar) surface, enabling a response tailored to the extent of cell loss. A capacity for differentiated cells to undergo direct lineage transitions allows for local restoration of proper cell balance at sites of injury. We present these recent findings as a paradigm for how a relatively quiescent tissue compartment can maintain homeostasis throughout a lifetime punctuated by injuries ranging from mild to life-threatening, and discuss how dysfunction or insufficiency of alveolar repair programs produce serious health consequences like cancer and fibrosis.


Subject(s)
Pulmonary Alveoli/cytology , Pulmonary Alveoli/physiology , Animals , Bronchi/physiology , Gases/metabolism , Humans , Neoplasms/pathology , Phenotype , Stem Cells/cytology
9.
Bone ; 77: 31-41, 2015 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25886903

ABSTRACT

Bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs) are key signaling molecules required for normal development of bones and other tissues. Previous studies have shown that null mutations in the mouse Bmp5 gene alter the size, shape and number of multiple bone and cartilage structures during development. Bmp5 mutations also delay healing of rib fractures in adult mutants, suggesting that the same signals used to pattern embryonic bone and cartilage are also reused during skeletal regeneration and repair. Despite intense interest in BMPs as agents for stimulating bone formation in clinical applications, little is known about the regulatory elements that control developmental or injury-induced BMP expression. To compare the DNA sequences that activate gene expression during embryonic bone formation and following acute injuries in adult animals, we assayed regions surrounding the Bmp5 gene for their ability to stimulate lacZ reporter gene expression in transgenic mice. Multiple genomic fragments, distributed across the Bmp5 locus, collectively coordinate expression in discrete anatomic domains during normal development, including in embryonic ribs. In contrast, a distinct regulatory region activated expression following rib fracture in adult animals. The same injury control region triggered gene expression in mesenchymal cells following tibia fracture, in migrating keratinocytes following dorsal skin wounding, and in regenerating epithelial cells following lung injury. The Bmp5 gene thus contains an "injury response" control region that is distinct from embryonic enhancers, and that is activated by multiple types of injury in adult animals.


Subject(s)
Bone Morphogenetic Protein 5/genetics , Fractures, Bone/genetics , Gene Expression/genetics , Regulatory Sequences, Nucleic Acid , Soft Tissue Injuries/genetics , Animals , Humans , Male , Mice, Transgenic
10.
Gastroenterology ; 148(7): 1392-404.e21, 2015 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25725293

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND & AIMS: Helicobacter pylori infection is the main risk factor for gastric cancer. We characterized the interactions of H pylori with gastric epithelial progenitor and stem cells in humans and mice and investigated how these interactions contribute to H pylori-induced pathology. METHODS: We used quantitative confocal microscopy and 3-dimensional reconstruction of entire gastric glands to determine the localizations of H pylori in stomach tissues from humans and infected mice. Using lineage tracing to mark cells derived from leucine-rich repeat-containing G-protein coupled receptor 5-positive (Lgr5(+)) stem cells (Lgr5-eGFP-IRES-CreERT2/Rosa26-TdTomato mice) and in situ hybridization, we analyzed gastric stem cell responses to infection. Isogenic H pylori mutants were used to determine the role of specific virulence factors in stem cell activation and pathology. RESULTS: H pylori grow as distinct bacterial microcolonies deep in the stomach glands and interact directly with gastric progenitor and stem cells in tissues from mice and humans. These gland-associated bacteria activate stem cells, increasing the number of stem cells, accelerating Lgr5(+) stem cell proliferation, and up-regulating expression of stem cell-related genes. Mutant bacteria with defects in chemotaxis that are able to colonize the stomach surface but not the antral glands in mice do not activate stem cells. In addition, bacteria that are unable to inject the contact-dependent virulence factor CagA into the epithelium colonized stomach glands in mice, but did not activate stem cells or produce hyperplasia to the same extent as wild-type H pylori. CONCLUSIONS: H pylori colonize and manipulate the progenitor and stem cell compartments, which alters turnover kinetics and glandular hyperplasia. Bacterial ability to alter the stem cells has important implications for gastrointestinal stem cell biology and H pylori-induced gastric pathology.


Subject(s)
Gastric Mucosa/microbiology , Helicobacter Infections/microbiology , Helicobacter pylori/growth & development , Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled/metabolism , Stem Cells/microbiology , Animals , Antigens, Bacterial/genetics , Antigens, Bacterial/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Biomarkers/metabolism , Cell Proliferation , Disease Models, Animal , Gastric Mucosa/metabolism , Genotype , Helicobacter Infections/immunology , Helicobacter Infections/pathology , Helicobacter pylori/genetics , Helicobacter pylori/pathogenicity , Host-Pathogen Interactions , Humans , Hyperplasia , Kinetics , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Transgenic , Mutation , Organoids , Phenotype , Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled/genetics , Stem Cells/metabolism , Stem Cells/pathology , Tissue Culture Techniques , Virulence
11.
Cell ; 133(6): 1093-105, 2008 Jun 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18555784

ABSTRACT

Acquisition of planar cell polarity (PCP) in epithelia involves intercellular communication, during which cells align their polarity with that of their neighbors. The transmembrane proteins Frizzled (Fz) and Van Gogh (Vang) are essential components of the intercellular communication mechanism, as loss of either strongly perturbs the polarity of neighboring cells. How Fz and Vang communicate polarity information between neighboring cells is poorly understood. The atypical cadherin, Flamingo (Fmi), is implicated in this process, yet whether Fmi acts permissively as a scaffold or instructively as a signal is unclear. Here, we provide evidence that Fmi functions instructively to mediate Fz-Vang intercellular signal relay, recruiting Fz and Vang to opposite sides of cell boundaries. We propose that two functional forms of Fmi, one of which is induced by and physically interacts with Fz, bind each other to create cadherin homodimers that signal bidirectionally and asymmetrically, instructing unequal responses in adjacent cell membranes to establish molecular asymmetry.


Subject(s)
Cadherins/metabolism , Cell Polarity , Drosophila Proteins/metabolism , Drosophila/cytology , Drosophila/metabolism , Signal Transduction , Animals , Frizzled Receptors/metabolism , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Models, Biological , Protein Interaction Mapping , Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled/metabolism
12.
Annu Rev Cell Dev Biol ; 20: 781-810, 2004.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15473860

ABSTRACT

Tight control of cell-cell communication is essential for the generation of a normally patterned embryo. A critical mediator of key cell-cell signaling events during embryogenesis is the highly conserved Wnt family of secreted proteins. Recent biochemical and genetic analyses have greatly enriched our understanding of how Wnts signal, and the list of canonical Wnt signaling components has exploded. The data reveal that multiple extracellular, cytoplasmic, and nuclear regulators intricately modulate Wnt signaling levels. In addition, receptor-ligand specificity and feedback loops help to determine Wnt signaling outputs. Wnts are required for adult tissue maintenance, and perturbations in Wnt signaling promote both human degenerative diseases and cancer. The next few years are likely to see novel therapeutic reagents aimed at controlling Wnt signaling in order to alleviate these conditions.


Subject(s)
Disease/etiology , Embryonic Development , Intercellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins/physiology , Signal Transduction/physiology , Animals , Cell Nucleus/physiology , Cytoplasm/physiology , Gene Expression Regulation/genetics , Glycoproteins/genetics , Glycoproteins/physiology , Humans , Intercellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins/genetics , Neoplasms/etiology , Protein Transport , Proto-Oncogene Proteins/genetics , Proto-Oncogene Proteins/physiology , Wnt Proteins
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