作者
Lei Chen,Xia Qiu,Abigail Dupre,Oscar Pellón-Cárdenas,Xiaojiao Fan,Xiaoting Xu,Prateeksha Rout,Katherine D. Walton,Joseph Burclaff,Ruolan Zhang,Wenxin Fang,Rachel Ofer,Alexandra Logerfo,Kiranmayi Vemuri,Sheila Bandyopadhyay,Jianming Wang,Gaëtan Barbet,Yan Wang,Nan Gao,Ansu O. Perekatt,Wenwei Hu,Scott T. Magness,Jason R. Spence,Michael P. Verzi
摘要
Summary
The gut epithelium has a remarkable ability to recover from damage. We employed a combination of high-throughput sequencing approaches, mouse genetics, and murine and human organoids and identified a role for TGFB signaling during intestinal regeneration following injury. At 2 days following irradiation (IR)-induced damage of intestinal crypts, a surge in TGFB1 expression is mediated by monocyte/macrophage cells at the location of damage. The depletion of macrophages or genetic disruption of TGFB signaling significantly impaired the regenerative response. Intestinal regeneration is characterized by the induction of a fetal-like transcriptional signature during repair. In organoid culture, TGFB1 treatment was necessary and sufficient to induce the fetal-like/regenerative state. Mesenchymal cells were also responsive to TGFB1 and enhanced the regenerative response. Mechanistically, pro-regenerative factors, YAP/TEAD and SOX9, are activated in the epithelium exposed to TGFB1. Finally, pre-treatment with TGFB1 enhanced the ability of primary epithelial cultures to engraft into damaged murine colon, suggesting promise for cellular therapy.