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EPIREGULIN creates a developmental niche for spatially organized human intestinal enteroids

Epithelial organoids derived from intestinal tissue, called enteroids, recapitulate many aspects of the organ in vitro and can be used for biological discovery, personalized medicine, and drug development. Here, we interrogated the cell signaling environment within the developing human intestine to...

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Autores principales: Childs, Charlie J., Holloway, Emily M., Sweet, Caden W., Tsai, Yu-Hwai, Wu, Angeline, Vallie, Abigail, Eiken, Madeline K., Capeling, Meghan M., Zwick, Rachel K., Palikuqi, Brisa, Trentesaux, Coralie, Wu, Joshua H., Pellón-Cardenas, Oscar, Zhang, Charles J., Glass, Ian, Loebel, Claudia, Yu, Qianhui, Camp, J. Gray, Sexton, Jonathan Z., Klein, Ophir D., Verzi, Michael P., Spence, Jason R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Clinical Investigation 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10070114/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36821371
http://dx.doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.165566
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author Childs, Charlie J.
Holloway, Emily M.
Sweet, Caden W.
Tsai, Yu-Hwai
Wu, Angeline
Vallie, Abigail
Eiken, Madeline K.
Capeling, Meghan M.
Zwick, Rachel K.
Palikuqi, Brisa
Trentesaux, Coralie
Wu, Joshua H.
Pellón-Cardenas, Oscar
Zhang, Charles J.
Glass, Ian
Loebel, Claudia
Yu, Qianhui
Camp, J. Gray
Sexton, Jonathan Z.
Klein, Ophir D.
Verzi, Michael P.
Spence, Jason R.
author_facet Childs, Charlie J.
Holloway, Emily M.
Sweet, Caden W.
Tsai, Yu-Hwai
Wu, Angeline
Vallie, Abigail
Eiken, Madeline K.
Capeling, Meghan M.
Zwick, Rachel K.
Palikuqi, Brisa
Trentesaux, Coralie
Wu, Joshua H.
Pellón-Cardenas, Oscar
Zhang, Charles J.
Glass, Ian
Loebel, Claudia
Yu, Qianhui
Camp, J. Gray
Sexton, Jonathan Z.
Klein, Ophir D.
Verzi, Michael P.
Spence, Jason R.
author_sort Childs, Charlie J.
collection PubMed
description Epithelial organoids derived from intestinal tissue, called enteroids, recapitulate many aspects of the organ in vitro and can be used for biological discovery, personalized medicine, and drug development. Here, we interrogated the cell signaling environment within the developing human intestine to identify niche cues that may be important for epithelial development and homeostasis. We identified an EGF family member, EPIREGULIN (EREG), which is robustly expressed in the developing human crypt. Enteroids generated from the developing human intestine grown in standard culture conditions, which contain EGF, are dominated by stem and progenitor cells and feature little differentiation and no spatial organization. Our results demonstrate that EREG can replace EGF in vitro, and EREG leads to spatially resolved enteroids that feature budded and proliferative crypt domains and a differentiated villus-like central lumen. Multiomic (transcriptome plus epigenome) profiling of native crypts, EGF-grown enteroids, and EREG-grown enteroids showed that EGF enteroids have an altered chromatin landscape that is dependent on EGF concentration, downregulate the master intestinal transcription factor CDX2, and ectopically express stomach genes, a phenomenon that is reversible. This is in contrast to EREG-grown enteroids, which remain intestine like in culture. Thus, EREG creates a homeostatic intestinal niche in vitro, enabling interrogation of stem cell function, cellular differentiation, and disease modeling.
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spelling pubmed-100701142023-04-05 EPIREGULIN creates a developmental niche for spatially organized human intestinal enteroids Childs, Charlie J. Holloway, Emily M. Sweet, Caden W. Tsai, Yu-Hwai Wu, Angeline Vallie, Abigail Eiken, Madeline K. Capeling, Meghan M. Zwick, Rachel K. Palikuqi, Brisa Trentesaux, Coralie Wu, Joshua H. Pellón-Cardenas, Oscar Zhang, Charles J. Glass, Ian Loebel, Claudia Yu, Qianhui Camp, J. Gray Sexton, Jonathan Z. Klein, Ophir D. Verzi, Michael P. Spence, Jason R. JCI Insight Technical Advance Epithelial organoids derived from intestinal tissue, called enteroids, recapitulate many aspects of the organ in vitro and can be used for biological discovery, personalized medicine, and drug development. Here, we interrogated the cell signaling environment within the developing human intestine to identify niche cues that may be important for epithelial development and homeostasis. We identified an EGF family member, EPIREGULIN (EREG), which is robustly expressed in the developing human crypt. Enteroids generated from the developing human intestine grown in standard culture conditions, which contain EGF, are dominated by stem and progenitor cells and feature little differentiation and no spatial organization. Our results demonstrate that EREG can replace EGF in vitro, and EREG leads to spatially resolved enteroids that feature budded and proliferative crypt domains and a differentiated villus-like central lumen. Multiomic (transcriptome plus epigenome) profiling of native crypts, EGF-grown enteroids, and EREG-grown enteroids showed that EGF enteroids have an altered chromatin landscape that is dependent on EGF concentration, downregulate the master intestinal transcription factor CDX2, and ectopically express stomach genes, a phenomenon that is reversible. This is in contrast to EREG-grown enteroids, which remain intestine like in culture. Thus, EREG creates a homeostatic intestinal niche in vitro, enabling interrogation of stem cell function, cellular differentiation, and disease modeling. American Society for Clinical Investigation 2023-03-22 /pmc/articles/PMC10070114/ /pubmed/36821371 http://dx.doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.165566 Text en © 2023 Childs et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Technical Advance
Childs, Charlie J.
Holloway, Emily M.
Sweet, Caden W.
Tsai, Yu-Hwai
Wu, Angeline
Vallie, Abigail
Eiken, Madeline K.
Capeling, Meghan M.
Zwick, Rachel K.
Palikuqi, Brisa
Trentesaux, Coralie
Wu, Joshua H.
Pellón-Cardenas, Oscar
Zhang, Charles J.
Glass, Ian
Loebel, Claudia
Yu, Qianhui
Camp, J. Gray
Sexton, Jonathan Z.
Klein, Ophir D.
Verzi, Michael P.
Spence, Jason R.
EPIREGULIN creates a developmental niche for spatially organized human intestinal enteroids
title EPIREGULIN creates a developmental niche for spatially organized human intestinal enteroids
title_full EPIREGULIN creates a developmental niche for spatially organized human intestinal enteroids
title_fullStr EPIREGULIN creates a developmental niche for spatially organized human intestinal enteroids
title_full_unstemmed EPIREGULIN creates a developmental niche for spatially organized human intestinal enteroids
title_short EPIREGULIN creates a developmental niche for spatially organized human intestinal enteroids
title_sort epiregulin creates a developmental niche for spatially organized human intestinal enteroids
topic Technical Advance
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10070114/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36821371
http://dx.doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.165566
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