John C. W. Hildyard , Abbe H. Crawford, Faye Rawson, Dominique O. Riddell, Rachel C. M. Harron, Richard J. Piercy
| DOI: 10.12688/wellcomeopenres.15762.1)
Background: The dystrophin gene has multiple isoforms: full-length dystrophin (dp427) is principally known for its expression in skeletal and cardiac muscle, but is also expressed in the brain, and several internal promoters give rise to shorter, N-terminally truncated isoforms with wider tissue expression patterns (dp260 in the retina, dp140 in the brain and dp71 in many tissues). These isoforms are believed to play unique cellular roles both during embryogenesis and in adulthood, but their shared sequence identity at both mRNA and protein levels makes study of distinct isoforms challenging by conventional methods.
Methods: RNAscope is a novel in-situ hybridisation technique that offers single-transcript resolution and the ability to multiplex, with different target sequences assigned to distinct fluorophores. Using probes designed to different regions of the dystrophin transcript (targeting 5', central and 3' sequences of the long dp427 mRNA), we can simultaneously detect and distinguish multiple dystrophin mRNA isoforms at sub-cellular histological levels. We have used these probes in healthy and dystrophic canine embryos to gain unique insights into isoform expression and distribution in the developing mammal.
Results: Dp427 is found in developing muscle as expected, apparently enriched at nascent myotendinous junctions. Endothelial and epithelial surfaces express dp71 only. Within the brain and spinal cord, all three isoforms are expressed in spatially distinct regions: dp71 predominates within proliferating germinal layer cells, dp140 within maturing, migrating cells and dp427 appears within more established cell populations. Dystrophin is also found within developing bones and teeth, something previously unreported, and our data suggests orchestrated involvement of multiple isoforms in formation of these tissues.
Conclusions: Overall, shorter isoforms appear associated with proliferation and migration, and longer isoforms with terminal lineage commitment: we discuss the distinct structural contributions and transcriptional demands suggested by these findings.
McCarthy, N;Tie, G;Madha, S;He, R;Kraiczy, J;Maglieri, A;Shivdasani, RA;
PMID: 36924771 | DOI: 10.1016/j.devcel.2023.02.012
Wnt and Rspondin (RSPO) signaling drives proliferation, and bone morphogenetic protein inhibitors (BMPi) impede differentiation, of intestinal stem cells (ISCs). Here, we identify the mouse ISC niche as a complex, multi-layered structure that encompasses distinct mesenchymal and smooth muscle populations. In young and adult mice, diverse sub-cryptal cells provide redundant ISC-supportive factors; few of these are restricted to single cell types. Niche functions refine during postnatal crypt morphogenesis, in part to oppose the dense aggregation of differentiation-promoting BMP+ sub-epithelial myofibroblasts at crypt-villus junctions. Muscularis mucosae, a specialized muscle layer, first appears during this period and supplements neighboring RSPO and BMPi sources. Components of this developing niche are conserved in human fetuses. The in vivo ablation of mouse postnatal smooth muscle increases BMP signaling activity, potently limiting a pre-weaning burst of crypt fission. Thus, distinct and progressively specialized mesenchymal cells together create the milieu that is required to propagate crypts during rapid organ growth and to sustain adult ISCs.
Biochemical and biophysical research communications
Yanagihara, T;Zhou, Q;Tsubouchi, K;Revill, S;Ayoub, A;Gholiof, M;Chong, SG;Dvorkin-Gheva, A;Ask, K;Shi, W;Kolb, MR;
PMID: 36958255 | DOI: 10.1016/j.bbrc.2023.03.020
Type 1 alveolar epithelial cells (AT1s) and type 2 alveolar epithelial cells (AT2s) regulate the structural integrity and function of alveoli. AT1s mediate gas exchange, whereas AT2s serve multiple functions, including surfactant secretion and alveolar repair through proliferation and differentiation into AT1s as progenitors. However, mechanisms regulating AT2 proliferation and differentiation remain unclear. Here we demonstrate that Gremlin, an intrinsic inhibitor of bone morphogenetic protein (BMP), induces AT2 proliferation and differentiation. Transient overexpression of Gremlin in rat lungs by adenovirus vector delivery suppressed BMP signaling, induced proliferation of AT2s and the production of Bmp2, which in turn led to the recovery of BMP signaling and induced AT2 differentiation into AT1s. Bleomycin-induced lung injury upregulated Gremlin and showed a similar time course of biomarker expression comparable to the adenovirus model. TGF-β and IL-1β induced Gremlin expression in fibroblasts. Taken together, our findings implicate that Gremlin expression during lung injury leads to precisely timed inhibition of BMP signaling and activates AT2s, leading to alveolar repair.
Tanigawa, S;Tanaka, E;Miike, K;Ohmori, T;Inoue, D;Cai, CL;Taguchi, A;Kobayashi, A;Nishinakamura, R;
PMID: 35105870 | DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-28226-7
Organs consist of the parenchyma and stroma, the latter of which coordinates the generation of organotypic structures. Despite recent advances in organoid technology, induction of organ-specific stroma and recapitulation of complex organ configurations from pluripotent stem cells (PSCs) have remained challenging. By elucidating the in vivo molecular features of the renal stromal lineage at a single-cell resolution level, we herein establish an in vitro induction protocol for stromal progenitors (SPs) from mouse PSCs. When the induced SPs are assembled with two differentially induced parenchymal progenitors (nephron progenitors and ureteric buds), the completely PSC-derived organoids reproduce the complex kidney structure, with multiple types of stromal cells distributed along differentiating nephrons and branching ureteric buds. Thus, integration of PSC-derived lineage-specific stroma into parenchymal organoids will pave the way toward recapitulation of the organotypic architecture and functions.