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Publication : MAP3K2-regulated intestinal stromal cells define a distinct stem cell niche.

First Author  Wu N Year  2021
Journal  Nature Volume  592
Issue  7855 Pages  606-610
PubMed ID  33658717 Mgi Jnum  J:316856
Mgi Id  MGI:6710189 Doi  10.1038/s41586-021-03283-y
Citation  Wu N, et al. (2021) MAP3K2-regulated intestinal stromal cells define a distinct stem cell niche. Nature 592(7855):606-610
abstractText  Intestinal stromal cells are known to modulate the propagation and differentiation of intestinal stem cells(1,2). However, the precise cellular and molecular mechanisms by which this diverse stromal cell population maintains tissue homeostasis and repair are poorly understood. Here we describe a subset of intestinal stromal cells, named MAP3K2-regulated intestinal stromal cells (MRISCs), and show that they are the primary cellular source of the WNT agonist R-spondin 1 following intestinal injury in mice. MRISCs, which are epigenetically and transcriptomically distinct from subsets of intestinal stromal cells that have previously been reported(3-6), are strategically localized at the bases of colon crypts, and function to maintain LGR5(+) intestinal stem cells and protect against acute intestinal damage through enhanced R-spondin 1 production. Mechanistically, this MAP3K2 specific function is mediated by a previously unknown reactive oxygen species (ROS)-MAP3K2-ERK5-KLF2 axis to enhance production of R-spondin 1. Our results identify MRISCs as a key component of an intestinal stem cell niche that specifically depends on MAP3K2 to augment WNT signalling for the regeneration of damaged intestine.
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