The development of the adult intestinal stem cells: Insights from studies on thyroid hormone-dependent amphibian metamorphosis

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作者
Yun-Bo Shi
Takashi Hasebe
Liezhen Fu
Kenta Fujimoto
Atsuko Ishizuya-Oka
机构
[1] Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD),Section on Molecular Morphogenesis, Laboratory of Gene Regulation and Development, Program in Cellular Regulation and Metabolism (PCRM)
[2] National Institutes of Health (NIH),Department of Biology
[3] Nippon Medical School,undefined
来源
Cell & Bioscience | / 1卷
关键词
Adult Stem Cell; Heat Shock Treatment; Amphibian Metamorphosis; Larval Epithelial Cell; PRMT1 Expression;
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摘要
Adult organ-specific stem cells are essential for organ homeostasis and repair in adult vertebrates. The intestine is one of the best-studied organs in this regard. The intestinal epithelium undergoes constant self-renewal throughout adult life across vertebrates through the proliferation and subsequent differentiation of the adult stem cells. This self-renewal system is established late during development, around birth, in mammals when endogenous thyroid hormone (T3) levels are high. Amphibian metamorphosis resembles mammalian postembryonic development around birth and is totally dependent upon the presence of high levels of T3. During this process, the tadpole intestine, predominantly a monolayer of larval epithelial cells, undergoes drastic transformation. The larval epithelial cells undergo apoptosis and concurrently, adult epithelial stem/progenitor cells develop de novo, rapidly proliferate, and then differentiate to establish a trough-crest axis of the epithelial fold, resembling the crypt-villus axis in the adult mammalian intestine. We and others have studied the T3-dependent remodeling of the intestine in Xenopus laevis. Here we will highlight some of the recent findings on the origin of the adult intestinal stem cells. We will discuss observations suggesting that liganded T3 receptor (TR) regulates cell autonomous formation of adult intestinal progenitor cells and that T3 action in the connective tissue is important for the establishment of the stem cell niche. We will further review evidence suggesting similar T3-dependent formation of adult intestinal stem cells in other vertebrates.
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