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1.
Cell Mol Gastroenterol Hepatol ; 16(3): 325-339, 2023.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37270061

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND & AIMS: Acute and chronic gastric injury induces alterations in differentiation within the corpus of the stomach called pyloric metaplasia. Pyloric metaplasia is characterized by the death of parietal cells and reprogramming of mitotically quiescent zymogenic chief cells into proliferative, mucin-rich spasmolytic polypeptide-expressing metaplasia (SPEM) cells. Overall, pyloric metaplastic units show increased proliferation and specific expansion of mucous lineages, both by proliferation of normal mucous neck cells and recruitment of SPEM cells. Here, we identify Sox9 as a potential gene of interest in the regulation of mucous neck and SPEM cell identity in the stomach. METHODS: We used immunostaining and electron microscopy to characterize the expression pattern of SRY-box transcription factor 9 (SOX9) during murine gastric development, homeostasis, and injury in homeostasis, after genetic deletion of Sox9 and after targeted genetic misexpression of Sox9 in the gastric epithelium and chief cells. RESULTS: SOX9 is expressed in all early gastric progenitors and strongly expressed in mature mucous neck cells with minor expression in the other principal gastric lineages during adult homeostasis. After injury, strong SOX9 expression was induced in the neck and base of corpus units in SPEM cells. Adult corpus units derived from Sox9-deficient gastric progenitors lacked normal mucous neck cells. Misexpression of Sox9 during postnatal development and adult homeostasis expanded mucous gene expression throughout corpus units including within the chief cell zone in the base. Sox9 deletion specifically in chief cells blunts their reprogramming into SPEM. CONCLUSIONS: Sox9 is a master regulator of mucous neck cell differentiation during gastric development. Sox9 also is required for chief cells to fully reprogram into SPEM after injury.


Sujet(s)
Cellules principales de l'estomac , Animaux , Souris , Cellules principales de l'estomac/métabolisme , Muqueuse gastrique/métabolisme , Métaplasie/métabolisme , Cellules pariétales gastriques/métabolisme , Estomac
3.
Gastroenterology ; 158(3): 598-609.e5, 2020 02.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31589873

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND & AIMS: Adult zymogen-producing (zymogenic) chief cells (ZCs) in the mammalian gastric gland base are believed to arise from descending mucous neck cells, which arise from stem cells. Gastric injury, such as from Helicobacter pylori infection in patients with chronic atrophic gastritis, can cause metaplasia, characterized by gastric cell expression of markers of wound-healing; these cells are called spasmolytic polypeptide-expressing metaplasia (SPEM) cells. We investigated differentiation and proliferation patterns of neck cells, ZCs, and SPEM cells in mice. METHODS: C57BL/6 mice were given intraperitoneal injections of high-dose tamoxifen to induce SPEM or gavaged with H pylori (PMSS1) to induce chronic gastric injury. Mice were then given pulses of 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine (BrdU) in their drinking water, followed by chase periods without BrdU, or combined with intraperitoneal injections of 5-ethynyl-2'-deoxyuridine. We collected gastric tissues and performed immunofluorescence and immunohistochemical analyses to study gastric cell proliferation, differentiation, and turnover. RESULTS: After 8 weeks of continuous BrdU administration, fewer than 10% of homeostatic ZCs incorporated BrdU, whereas 88% of neck cells were labeled. In pulse-chase experiments, various chase periods decreased neck cell label but did not increase labeling of ZCs. When mice were given BrdU at the same time as tamoxifen, more than 90% of cells were labeled in all gastric lineages. After 3 months' recovery (no tamoxifen), ZCs became the predominant BrdU-labeled population, whereas other cells, including neck cells, were mostly negative. When we tracked the labeled cells in such mice over time, we observed that the proportion of BrdU-positive ZCs remained greater than 60% up to 11 months. In mice whose ZCs were the principal BrdU-positive population, acute injury by tamoxifen or chronic injury by H pylori infection resulted in SPEM cells becoming the principal BrdU-positive population. After withdrawal of tamoxifen, BrdU-positive ZCs reappeared. CONCLUSIONS: We studied mice in homeostasis or with tamoxifen- or H pylori-induced SPEM. Our findings indicated that mucous neck cells do not contribute substantially to generation of ZCs during homeostasis and that ZCs maintain their own census, likely through infrequent self-replication. After metaplasia-inducing injury, ZCs can become SPEM cells, and then redifferentiate into ZCs on injury resolution.


Sujet(s)
Différenciation cellulaire , Prolifération cellulaire , Cellules principales de l'estomac/anatomopathologie , Cellules principales de l'estomac/physiologie , Muqueuse gastrique/anatomopathologie , Animaux , Broxuridine , Femelle , Technique d'immunofluorescence , Muqueuse gastrique/métabolisme , Infections à Helicobacter/complications , Helicobacter pylori , Homéostasie , Immunohistochimie , Protéines et peptides de signalisation intercellulaire/métabolisme , Mâle , Métaplasie/étiologie , Métaplasie/métabolisme , Métaplasie/anatomopathologie , Métaplasie/physiopathologie , Souris , Souris de lignée C57BL , Tamoxifène
4.
Cell Mol Gastroenterol Hepatol ; 8(3): 379-405, 2019.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31071489

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND & AIMS: Many differentiated epithelial cell types are able to reprogram in response to tissue damage. Although reprogramming represents an important physiological response to injury, the regulation of cellular plasticity is not well understood. Damage to the gastric epithelium initiates reprogramming of zymogenic chief cells into a metaplastic cell lineage known as spasmolytic polypeptide-expressing metaplasia (SPEM). The present study seeks to identify the role of xCT, a cystine/glutamate antiporter, in chief cell reprogramming after gastric injury. We hypothesize that xCT-dependent reactive oxygen species (ROS) detoxification is required for the reprogramming of chief cells into SPEM. METHODS: Sulfasalazine (an xCT inhibitor) and small interfering RNA knockdown were used to target xCT on metaplastic cells in vitro. Sulfasalazine-treated wild-type mice and xCT knockout mice were analyzed. L635 or DMP-777 treatment was used to chemically induce acute gastric damage. The anti-inflammatory metabolites of sulfasalazine (sulfapyridine and mesalazine) were used as controls. Normal gastric lineages, metaplastic markers, autophagy, proliferation, xCT activity, ROS, and apoptosis were assessed. RESULTS: xCT was up-regulated early as chief cells transitioned into SPEM. Inhibition of xCT or small interfering RNA knockdown blocked cystine uptake and decreased glutathione production by metaplastic cells and prevented ROS detoxification and proliferation. Moreover, xCT activity was required for chief cell reprogramming into SPEM after gastric injury in vivo. Chief cells from xCT-deficient mice showed decreased autophagy, mucus granule formation and proliferation, as well as increased levels of ROS and apoptosis compared with wild-type mice. On the other hand, the anti-inflammatory metabolites of sulfasalazine did not affect SPEM development. CONCLUSIONS: The results presented here suggest that maintaining redox balance is crucial for progression through the reprogramming process and that xCT-mediated cystine uptake is required for chief cell plasticity and ROS detoxification.


Sujet(s)
Système y+ de transport d'acides aminés/génétique , Azétidines/effets indésirables , Muqueuse gastrique/anatomopathologie , Pipérazines/effets indésirables , Sulfasalazine/pharmacologie , Système y+ de transport d'acides aminés/métabolisme , Animaux , Lignée cellulaire , Plasticité cellulaire , Reprogrammation cellulaire , Cellules principales de l'estomac/cytologie , Cellules principales de l'estomac/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Cellules principales de l'estomac/métabolisme , Muqueuse gastrique/cytologie , Muqueuse gastrique/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Muqueuse gastrique/métabolisme , Techniques de knock-out de gènes , Humains , Souris , Cellules pariétales gastriques/cytologie , Cellules pariétales gastriques/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Cellules pariétales gastriques/métabolisme , Espèces réactives de l'oxygène/métabolisme , Régulation positive
5.
EMBO J ; 37(7)2018 04 03.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29467218

RÉSUMÉ

In 1900, Adami speculated that a sequence of context-independent energetic and structural changes governed the reversion of differentiated cells to a proliferative, regenerative state. Accordingly, we show here that differentiated cells in diverse organs become proliferative via a shared program. Metaplasia-inducing injury caused both gastric chief and pancreatic acinar cells to decrease mTORC1 activity and massively upregulate lysosomes/autophagosomes; then increase damage associated metaplastic genes such as Sox9; and finally reactivate mTORC1 and re-enter the cell cycle. Blocking mTORC1 permitted autophagy and metaplastic gene induction but blocked cell cycle re-entry at S-phase. In kidney and liver regeneration and in human gastric metaplasia, mTORC1 also correlated with proliferation. In lysosome-defective Gnptab-/- mice, both metaplasia-associated gene expression changes and mTORC1-mediated proliferation were deficient in pancreas and stomach. Our findings indicate differentiated cells become proliferative using a sequential program with intervening checkpoints: (i) differentiated cell structure degradation; (ii) metaplasia- or progenitor-associated gene induction; (iii) cell cycle re-entry. We propose this program, which we term "paligenosis", is a fundamental process, like apoptosis, available to differentiated cells to fuel regeneration following injury.


Sujet(s)
Différenciation cellulaire/physiologie , Prolifération cellulaire/physiologie , Complexe-1 cible mécanistique de la rapamycine/métabolisme , Régénération/physiologie , Cellules acineuses , Animaux , Autophagosomes/physiologie , Cycle cellulaire/physiologie , Transdifférenciation cellulaire/physiologie , Reprogrammation cellulaire/physiologie , Cellules principales de l'estomac/anatomopathologie , Tube digestif/anatomopathologie , Expression des gènes , Humains , Lysosomes , Métaplasie/génétique , Souris , Souris de lignée C57BL , Phase S/physiologie , Facteur de transcription SOX-9/métabolisme , Estomac/traumatismes , Estomac/anatomopathologie , Transferases (other substituted phosphate groups)/génétique
6.
Gastroenterology ; 154(4): 839-843.e2, 2018 03.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29248442

RÉSUMÉ

Spasmolytic polypeptide-expressing metaplasia (SPEM) develops in patients with chronic atrophic gastritis due to infection with Helicobacter pylori; it might be a precursor to intestinal metaplasia and gastric adenocarcinoma. Lineage tracing experiments of the gastric corpus in mice have not established whether SPEM derives from proliferating stem cells or differentiated, post-mitotic zymogenic chief cells in the gland base. We investigated whether differentiated cells can give rise to SPEM using a nongenetic approach in mice. Mice were given intraperitoneal injections of 5-fluorouracil, which blocked gastric cell proliferation, plus tamoxifen to induce SPEM. Based on analyses of molecular and histologic markers, we found SPEM developed even in the absence of cell proliferation. SPEM therefore did not arise from stem cells. In histologic analyses of gastric resection specimens from 10 patients with adenocarcinoma, we found normal zymogenic chief cells that were transitioning into SPEM cells only in gland bases, rather than the proliferative stem cell zone. Our findings indicate that SPEM can arise by direct reprogramming of existing cells-mainly of chief cells.


Sujet(s)
Adénocarcinome/anatomopathologie , Transdifférenciation cellulaire , Cellules principales de l'estomac/anatomopathologie , États précancéreux/anatomopathologie , Tumeurs de l'estomac/anatomopathologie , Estomac/anatomopathologie , Adénocarcinome/métabolisme , Adénocarcinome/chirurgie , Animaux , Marqueurs biologiques tumoraux/métabolisme , Lignage cellulaire , Prolifération cellulaire , Transdifférenciation cellulaire/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Transformation cellulaire néoplasique/métabolisme , Transformation cellulaire néoplasique/anatomopathologie , Cellules principales de l'estomac/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Cellules principales de l'estomac/métabolisme , Fluorouracil/pharmacologie , Gastrectomie , Muqueuse gastrique/métabolisme , Protéines et peptides de signalisation intercellulaire , Métaplasie , Souris , Peptides/métabolisme , Phénotype , États précancéreux/métabolisme , États précancéreux/chirurgie , Estomac/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Tumeurs de l'estomac/métabolisme , Tumeurs de l'estomac/chirurgie , Facteurs temps
7.
Mol Cell Biol ; 36(24): 3033-3047, 2016 12 15.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27697859

RÉSUMÉ

Maintenance of cell type identity is crucial for health, yet little is known of the regulation that sustains the long-term stability of differentiated phenotypes. To investigate the roles that key transcriptional regulators play in adult differentiated cells, we examined the effects of depletion of the developmental master regulator PTF1A on the specialized phenotype of the adult pancreatic acinar cell in vivo Transcriptome sequencing and chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing results showed that PTF1A maintains the expression of genes for all cellular processes dedicated to the production of the secretory digestive enzymes, a highly attuned surveillance of unfolded proteins, and a heightened unfolded protein response (UPR). Control by PTF1A is direct on target genes and indirect through a ten-member transcription factor network. Depletion of PTF1A causes an imbalance that overwhelms the UPR, induces cellular injury, and provokes acinar metaplasia. Compromised cellular identity occurs by derepression of characteristic stomach genes, some of which are also associated with pancreatic ductal cells. The loss of acinar cell homeostasis, differentiation, and identity is directly relevant to the pathologies of pancreatitis and pancreatic adenocarcinoma.


Sujet(s)
Cellules acineuses/cytologie , Analyse de profil d'expression de gènes/méthodes , Pancréas exocrine/cytologie , Facteurs de transcription/génétique , Transcription génétique , Cellules acineuses/métabolisme , Animaux , Différenciation cellulaire , Régulation de l'expression des gènes , Techniques de knock-out de gènes , Homéostasie , Souris , Pancréas exocrine/métabolisme , Dépliement des protéines , Analyse de séquence d'ARN/méthodes , Facteurs de transcription/métabolisme , Réponse aux protéines mal repliées
8.
Cell Mol Gastroenterol Hepatol ; 2(5): 546-559, 2016 Sep.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27642625

RÉSUMÉ

Gastric diseases cause considerable worldwide burden. However, the stomach is still poorly understood in terms of the molecular-cellular processes that govern its development and homeostasis. In particular, the complex relationship between the differentiated cell types located within the stomach and the stem and progenitor cells that give rise to them is significantly understudied relative to other organs. In this review, we will highlight the current state of the literature relating to specification of gastric cell lineages from embryogenesis to adulthood. Special emphasis is placed on substantial gaps in knowledge about stomach specification that we think should be tackled to advance the field. For example, it has long been assumed that adult gastric units have a granule-free stem cell that gives rise to all differentiated lineages. Here we will point out that there are also other models that fit all extant data, such as long-lived lineage-committed progenitors that might serve as a source of new cells during homeostasis.

9.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26257608

RÉSUMÉ

Commissural neurons project across the midline at all levels of the central nervous system (CNS), providing bilateral communication critical for the coordination of motor activity and sensory perception. Midline crossing at the spinal ventral midline has been extensively studied and has revealed that multiple developmental lineages contribute to this commissural neuron population. Ventral midline crossing occurs in a manner dependent on Robo3 regulation of Robo/Slit signaling and the ventral commissure is absent in the spinal cord and hindbrain of Robo3 mutants. Midline crossing in the spinal cord is not limited to the ventral midline, however. While prior anatomical studies provide evidence that commissural axons also cross the midline dorsally, little is known of the genetic and molecular properties of dorsally-crossing neurons or of the mechanisms that regulate dorsal midline crossing. In this study, we describe a commissural neuron population that crosses the spinal dorsal midline during the last quarter of embryogenesis in discrete fiber bundles present throughout the rostrocaudal extent of the spinal cord. Using immunohistochemistry, neurotracing, and mouse genetics, we show that this commissural neuron population includes spinal inhibitory neurons and sensory nociceptors. While the floor plate and roof plate are dispensable for dorsal midline crossing, we show that this population depends on Robo/Slit signaling yet crosses the dorsal midline in a Robo3-independent manner. The dorsally-crossing commissural neuron population we describe suggests a substrate circuitry for pain processing in the dorsal spinal cord.


Sujet(s)
Plan d'organisation du corps/physiologie , Protéines membranaires/métabolisme , Activité motrice/physiologie , Protéines de tissu nerveux/métabolisme , Inhibition nerveuse/physiologie , Nocicepteurs/physiologie , Moelle spinale , Facteurs âges , Acides aminés/métabolisme , Animaux , Axones/physiologie , Plan d'organisation du corps/génétique , Embryon de mammifère , Régulation de l'expression des gènes au cours du développement/physiologie , Protéines à fluorescence verte/génétique , Protéines à fluorescence verte/métabolisme , Protéines membranaires/génétique , Souris , Souris transgéniques , Activité motrice/génétique , Mutation/génétique , Protéines de tissu nerveux/génétique , Molécule d'adhérence cellulaire neurale L-1/métabolisme , Inhibition nerveuse/génétique , Récepteurs de surface cellulaire , Transduction du signal/physiologie , Moelle spinale/cytologie , Moelle spinale/embryologie , Moelle spinale/croissance et développement , Facteurs de transcription/génétique , Facteurs de transcription/métabolisme
10.
Elife ; 42015 Jul 07.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26151762

RÉSUMÉ

Understanding the initiation and progression of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) may provide therapeutic strategies for this deadly disease. Recently, we and others made the surprising finding that PDAC and its preinvasive precursors, pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasia (PanIN), arise via reprogramming of mature acinar cells. We therefore hypothesized that the master regulator of acinar differentiation, PTF1A, could play a central role in suppressing PDAC initiation. In this study, we demonstrate that PTF1A expression is lost in both mouse and human PanINs, and that this downregulation is functionally imperative in mice for acinar reprogramming by oncogenic KRAS. Loss of Ptf1a alone is sufficient to induce acinar-to-ductal metaplasia, potentiate inflammation, and induce a KRAS-permissive, PDAC-like gene expression profile. As a result, Ptf1a-deficient acinar cells are dramatically sensitized to KRAS transformation, and reduced Ptf1a greatly accelerates development of invasive PDAC. Together, these data indicate that cell differentiation regulators constitute a new tumor suppressive mechanism in the pancreas.


Sujet(s)
Cellules acineuses/physiologie , Adénocarcinome/anatomopathologie , Carcinome du canal pancréatique/anatomopathologie , Transdifférenciation cellulaire , Facteurs de transcription/analyse , Animaux , Épithélioma in situ/anatomopathologie , Modèles animaux de maladie humaine , Analyse de profil d'expression de gènes , Humains , Souris , Facteurs de transcription/génétique
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