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Cell and chromatin transitions in intestinal stem cell regeneration

Singh, Pratik N P
Madha, Shariq
Leiter, Andrew B.
Shivdasani, Ramesh A
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UMass Chan Affiliations
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Journal Article
Publication Date
2022-06-23
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Abstract

The progeny of intestinal stem cells (ISCs) dedifferentiate in response to ISC attrition. The precise cell sources, transitional states, and chromatin remodeling behind this activity remain unclear. In the skin, stem cell recovery after injury preserves an epigenetic memory of the damage response; whether similar memories arise and persist in regenerated ISCs is not known. We addressed these questions by examining gene activity and open chromatin at the resolution of single Neurog3-labeled mouse intestinal crypt cells, hence deconstructing forward and reverse differentiation of the intestinal secretory (Sec) lineage. We show that goblet, Paneth, and enteroendocrine cells arise by multilineage priming in common precursors, followed by selective access at thousands of cell-restricted cis-elements. Selective ablation of the ISC compartment elicits speedy reversal of chromatin and transcriptional features in large fractions of precursor and mature crypt Sec cells without obligate cell cycle re-entry. ISC programs decay and reappear along a cellular continuum lacking discernible discrete interim states. In the absence of gross tissue damage, Sec cells simply reverse their forward trajectories, without invoking developmental or other extrinsic programs, and starting chromatin identities are effectively erased. These findings identify strikingly plastic molecular frameworks in assembly and regeneration of a self-renewing tissue.

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Singh PNP, Madha S, Leiter AB, Shivdasani RA. Cell and chromatin transitions in intestinal stem cell regeneration. Genes Dev. 2022 Jun 1;36(11-12):684-698. doi: 10.1101/gad.349412.122. Epub 2022 Jun 23. PMID: 35738677; PMCID: PMC9296007.

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DOI
10.1101/gad.349412.122
PubMed ID
35738677
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© 2022 Singh et al. This article is distributed exclusively by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press for the first six months after the full-issue publi- cation date (see http://genesdev.cshlp.org/site/misc/terms.xhtml). After six months, it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribu- tion-NonCommercial 4.0 International), as described at http://creative- commons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International