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. 2022 Mar 1;38(9):110438.
doi: 10.1016/j.celrep.2022.110438.

BMP gradient along the intestinal villus axis controls zonated enterocyte and goblet cell states

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BMP gradient along the intestinal villus axis controls zonated enterocyte and goblet cell states

Joep Beumer et al. Cell Rep. .
Free article

Abstract

Intestinal epithelial cells derive from stem cells at the crypt base and travel along the crypt-villus axis to die at the villus tip. The two dominant villus epithelial cell types, absorptive enterocytes and mucous-secreting goblet cells, are mature when they exit crypts. Murine enterocytes switch functional cell states during migration along the villus. Here, we ask whether this zonation is driven by the bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) gradient, which increases toward the villus. Using human intestinal organoids, we show that BMP signaling controls the expression of zonated genes in enterocytes. We find that goblet cells display similar zonation involving antimicrobial genes. Using an inducible Bmpr1a knockout mouse model, we confirm that BMP controls these zonated genes in vivo. Our findings imply that local manipulation of BMP signal strength may be used to reset the enterocyte "rheostat" of carbohydrate versus lipid uptake and to control the antimicrobial response through goblet cells.

Keywords: BMP signaling; CRISPR-Cas9; enterocytes; intestinal differentiation; organoids; single-cell RNA sequencing.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of interests H.C. is inventor on several patents related to organoid technology; his full disclosure is given at https://www.uu.nl/staff/JCClevers/. J.B. and H.C. are inventors on a patent related to this work (improved differentiation method, publication number 20210047618).

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