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In Vitro Polarization of Colonoids to Create an Intestinal Stem Cell Compartment

The polarity of proliferative and differentiated cellular compartments of colonic crypts is believed to be specified by gradients of key mitogens and morphogens. Indirect evidence demonstrates a tight correlation between Wnt- pathway activity and the basal-luminal patterning; however, to date there...

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Autores principales: Attayek, Peter J., Ahmad, Asad A., Wang, Yuli, Williamson, Ian, Sims, Christopher E., Magness, Scott T., Allbritton, Nancy L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4839657/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27100890
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0153795
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author Attayek, Peter J.
Ahmad, Asad A.
Wang, Yuli
Williamson, Ian
Sims, Christopher E.
Magness, Scott T.
Allbritton, Nancy L.
author_facet Attayek, Peter J.
Ahmad, Asad A.
Wang, Yuli
Williamson, Ian
Sims, Christopher E.
Magness, Scott T.
Allbritton, Nancy L.
author_sort Attayek, Peter J.
collection PubMed
description The polarity of proliferative and differentiated cellular compartments of colonic crypts is believed to be specified by gradients of key mitogens and morphogens. Indirect evidence demonstrates a tight correlation between Wnt- pathway activity and the basal-luminal patterning; however, to date there has been no direct experimental manipulation demonstrating that a chemical gradient of signaling factors can produce similar patterning under controlled conditions. In the current work, colonic organoids (colonoids) derived from cultured, multicellular organoid fragments or single stem cells were exposed in culture to steep linear gradients of two Wnt-signaling ligands, Wnt-3a and R-spondin1. The use of a genetically engineered Sox9-Sox9EGFP:CAGDsRED reporter gene mouse model and EdU-based labeling enabled crypt patterning to be quantified in the developing colonoids. Colonoids derived from multicellular fragments cultured for 5 days under a Wnt-3a or a combined Wnt-3a and R-spondin1 gradient were highly polarized with proliferative cells localizing to the region of the higher morphogen concentration. In a Wnt-3a gradient, Sox9EGFP polarization was 7.3 times greater than that of colonoids cultured in the absence of a gradient; and the extent of EdU polarization was 2.2 times greater than that in the absence of a gradient. Under a Wnt-3a/R-spondin1 gradient, Sox9EGFP polarization was 8.2 times greater than that of colonoids cultured in the absence of a gradient while the extent of EdU polarization was 10 times greater than that in the absence of a gradient. Colonoids derived from single stem cells cultured in Wnt-3a/R-spondin1 gradients were most highly polarized demonstrated by a Sox9EGFP polarization 20 times that of colonoids grown in the absence of a gradient. This data provides direct evidence that a linear gradient of Wnt signaling factors applied to colonic stem cells is sufficient to direct patterning of the colonoid unit in culture.
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spelling pubmed-48396572016-04-29 In Vitro Polarization of Colonoids to Create an Intestinal Stem Cell Compartment Attayek, Peter J. Ahmad, Asad A. Wang, Yuli Williamson, Ian Sims, Christopher E. Magness, Scott T. Allbritton, Nancy L. PLoS One Research Article The polarity of proliferative and differentiated cellular compartments of colonic crypts is believed to be specified by gradients of key mitogens and morphogens. Indirect evidence demonstrates a tight correlation between Wnt- pathway activity and the basal-luminal patterning; however, to date there has been no direct experimental manipulation demonstrating that a chemical gradient of signaling factors can produce similar patterning under controlled conditions. In the current work, colonic organoids (colonoids) derived from cultured, multicellular organoid fragments or single stem cells were exposed in culture to steep linear gradients of two Wnt-signaling ligands, Wnt-3a and R-spondin1. The use of a genetically engineered Sox9-Sox9EGFP:CAGDsRED reporter gene mouse model and EdU-based labeling enabled crypt patterning to be quantified in the developing colonoids. Colonoids derived from multicellular fragments cultured for 5 days under a Wnt-3a or a combined Wnt-3a and R-spondin1 gradient were highly polarized with proliferative cells localizing to the region of the higher morphogen concentration. In a Wnt-3a gradient, Sox9EGFP polarization was 7.3 times greater than that of colonoids cultured in the absence of a gradient; and the extent of EdU polarization was 2.2 times greater than that in the absence of a gradient. Under a Wnt-3a/R-spondin1 gradient, Sox9EGFP polarization was 8.2 times greater than that of colonoids cultured in the absence of a gradient while the extent of EdU polarization was 10 times greater than that in the absence of a gradient. Colonoids derived from single stem cells cultured in Wnt-3a/R-spondin1 gradients were most highly polarized demonstrated by a Sox9EGFP polarization 20 times that of colonoids grown in the absence of a gradient. This data provides direct evidence that a linear gradient of Wnt signaling factors applied to colonic stem cells is sufficient to direct patterning of the colonoid unit in culture. Public Library of Science 2016-04-21 /pmc/articles/PMC4839657/ /pubmed/27100890 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0153795 Text en © 2016 Attayek et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Attayek, Peter J.
Ahmad, Asad A.
Wang, Yuli
Williamson, Ian
Sims, Christopher E.
Magness, Scott T.
Allbritton, Nancy L.
In Vitro Polarization of Colonoids to Create an Intestinal Stem Cell Compartment
title In Vitro Polarization of Colonoids to Create an Intestinal Stem Cell Compartment
title_full In Vitro Polarization of Colonoids to Create an Intestinal Stem Cell Compartment
title_fullStr In Vitro Polarization of Colonoids to Create an Intestinal Stem Cell Compartment
title_full_unstemmed In Vitro Polarization of Colonoids to Create an Intestinal Stem Cell Compartment
title_short In Vitro Polarization of Colonoids to Create an Intestinal Stem Cell Compartment
title_sort in vitro polarization of colonoids to create an intestinal stem cell compartment
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4839657/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27100890
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0153795
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