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Non-neural Stem Cells

JP
by Julius P.

12.     Intestinal stem cell and their niche:

·      Where do you find intestinal stem cells?

·      What are components of the intestinal stem cell niche?

·      How is proliferation and differentiation of intestinal stem cells regulated?

·      Which signaling pathways are involved?

·      Where are the signals produced and which cells respond to them?

·      How can you block WNT signaling originating from a particular source to study its function?

Where do you find intestinal stem cells?

base of intestinal crypts

What are components of the intestinal stem cell niche?

  • lgr5+ stem cells (CBCCs, fast cycling)

  • 4/4+ position slow cycling stem cells

  • paneth cells

  • telocytes & pericryptal stromal cells - line basal surface of epithelium

  • myofibroblasts

  • smooth muscle cells

  • transit amplifying cells (proliferative zone)

  • ECM/ basal lamina

  • differentiated cells (differentiation zone: matured epithelial cell types- Enterocytes, enteroendocrine cells,tuft cells, goblet cells)

How is proliferation and differentiation of intestinal stem cells regulated?

  • proliferation of CBCCs via paracrine and autocrine signals from Paneth cells and stromal cells (Wnt, EGF, Notch)

  • opposing morphogenic gradients Wnt2b+Rspondin&Noggin & BMP4

  • division of CBCC at crypt base generates vertical displacement of cells —> shedding at vili tips (anoikis)

  • daugher cells adapt secretory or absorptive lineage fates as they move out of crypt (loss of BMP inhibition via Noggin; Notch signaling regulates decision between secretory and absorptive fates)

Which signaling pathways are involved?

Where are the signals produced and which cells respond to them?

  • Wnt & Rspondin:

    • produced by stromal cells (Wnt2b) and Paneth cells (Wnt3a), CBCCs respond, maintenance of proliferation

  • BMP4

    • produced by stromal cells towards lumen, promotes differentiation of transit amplifying cells

  • Noggin

    • produced by smooth muscle & fibroblasts in stroma at crypt base, represses differentiation of CBCCs

  • EGF

    • /produced by stromal cells at crypt base) and Paneth cells, promote proliferation and survival of CBCCs

  • Shh

    • secreted by stromal cells towards lumen, activates BMP secretion

  • Notch

    • Dll4 expression by Paneth cells -> triggers NICD in CBCC ->maintenance

    • Notch ligand expression by TA cells: lineage decisions

  • Ephrin

    • expressed in Niche, regulated positioning

How can you block WNT signaling originating from a particular source to study its function?

Inhibitors specific to signaling molecules ca isolate Wnt function

TCF/Lef TF KO

lipid modifications necessary for Wnt secretion:

flox enzyme that is essential for lipid modifications and put cre recombinase under control of cell type specific promoter e.g. Paneth cell specific promoter


13.     Hematopoietic stem cell and their niche/s:

·      Where do you find hematopoietic stem cells?

·      What are the components of the stem cell niche/s?

·      How do hematopoietic stem cells home to their niche?

·      Which signaling pathway are involved?

Where do you find hematopoietic stem cells?

bone marrow

What are the components of the stem cell niche/s?

HSCs are arranged in two subniches that maintain a quiescent and a fast-cycling HSC population

—> endosteal niche (quiscent) and perivascular (fast-cycling) niche

  • endosteal niche:

    long-term HSCs, progenitors, osteoblasts (secrete angiopoietin-1 and thrombopoietin that maintain quiscence), microvasculature, stromal cells

  • perivascular niche:

    Short-term (active) HSCs, progenitors, blood vessels (perivascular HSCs are tightly associated with endothelial lining of vasculature), bone marrow-infiltrating axons, mesenchymal stem cells, stromal cells

How do hematopoietic stem cells home to their niche?

regulated via CXCL12/CXCR4 signaling and noradrenaline

  • CXCL12 is secreted by CAR (CXCL12 abundant reticular cells) and MSCs

  • acts via CXCR4 (expressed on HSCs) on HSCs and promotes proliferation and homing to niche

  • BM-infiltrating axons secrete noradrenaline (circadian rhythm and stress-dependent) which acts on stromal cells and reduces CXCL12 secretion

  • HSC enter circulation

Which signaling pathway are involved?

  • angiopoietin-1 and thrombopoitein

  • CXCR4/CXCL12

  • c-Kit/SCF

  • chemokine signaling

  • neurotransmitter signaling (Noradrenaline)

  • additional signaling factors: Wnt,TGFß,Notch/Jagged1, Integrins


Author

Julius P.

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