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Probes for INS

ACD can configure probes for the various manual and automated assays for INS for RNAscope Assay, or for Basescope Assay compatible for your species of interest.

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Targeted ablation of Lgr5-expressing intestinal stem cells in diphtheria toxin receptor-based mouse and organoid models

STAR protocols

2022 Jun 17

Lim, HYG;Yada, S;Barker, N;
PMID: 35620071 | DOI: 10.1016/j.xpro.2022.101411

Intestinal cells marked by Lgr5 function as tissue-resident stem cells that sustain the homeostatic replenishment of the epithelium. By incorporating a diphtheria toxin receptor (DTR) cassette linked to the Lgr5 coding region, native Lgr5-expressing cells are susceptible to ablation upon DT administration in vivo. A similar strategy can be used for Lgr5-expressing cells within organoids established from DTR models. Together, these in vivo and in vitro approaches will facilitate dissection of the roles of Lgr5-expressing cells residing in different tissue compartments. For complete details on the use and execution of this protocol, please refer to Tan et al. (2021).
Successful hemostasis of bleeding gastric inflammatory fibroid polyp by endoscopic treatment in a patient with severe COVID-19

Clinical journal of gastroenterology

2021 Apr 11

Murota, A;Yoshi, S;Okuda, R;Oowada, S;Yamakawa, T;Kazama, T;Hirayama, D;Ishigami, K;Yamano, HO;Narimatu, E;Sugita, S;Hasegawa, T;Nakase, H;
PMID: 33840076 | DOI: 10.1007/s12328-021-01402-w

The coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) has rapidly become a pandemic, resulting in a global suspension of non-emergency medical procedures such as screening endoscopic examinations. There have been several reports of COVID-19 patients presenting with gastrointestinal symptoms such as diarrhea and vomiting. In this report, we present a case of successful hemostasis of bleeding gastric inflammatory fibroid polyp by endoscopic treatment in a patient with severe COVID-19. The case was under mechanical ventilation with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO), and the airway was on a closed circuit. This indicates that COVID-19 is associated with not only lung injury but also intestinal damage, and that proper protective protocols are essential in guaranteeing the best outcomes for patients and clinical professionals during this pandemic.
Stromal Hedgehog signalling is downregulated in colon cancer and its restoration restrains tumour growth

Nat Commun.

2016 Aug 05

Gerling M, Büller NV, Kirn LM, Joost S, Frings O, Englert B, Bergström Å, Kuiper RV, Blaas L, Wielenga MC, Almer S, Kühl AA, Fredlund E, van den Brink GR, Toftgård R.
PMID: 27492255 | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms12321

A role for Hedgehog (Hh) signalling in the development of colorectal cancer (CRC) has been proposed. In CRC and other solid tumours, Hh ligands are upregulated; however, a specific Hh antagonist provided no benefit in a clinical trial. Here we use Hh reporter mice to show that downstream Hh activity is unexpectedly diminished in a mouse model of colitis-associated colon cancer, and that downstream Hh signalling is restricted to the stroma. Functionally, stroma-specific Hh activation in mice markedly reduces the tumour load and blocks progression of advanced neoplasms, partly via the modulation of BMP signalling and restriction of the colonic stem cell signature. By contrast, attenuated Hh signalling accelerates colonic tumourigenesis. In human CRC, downstream Hh activity is similarly reduced and canonical Hh signalling remains predominantly paracrine. Our results suggest that diminished downstream Hh signalling enhances CRC development, and that stromal Hh activation can act as a colonic tumour suppressor.

Lgr5-expressing chief cells drive epithelial regeneration and cancer in the oxyntic stomach.

Nat Cell Biol.

2017 Jun 05

Leushacke M, Tan SH, Wong A, Swathi Y, Hajamohideen A, Tan LT, Goh J, Wong E, Denil SLIJ, Murakami K, Barker N.
PMID: 28581476 | DOI: 10.1038/ncb3541

The daily renewal of the corpus epithelium is fuelled by adult stem cells residing within tubular glands, but the identity of these stem cells remains controversial. Lgr5 marks homeostatic stem cells and 'reserve' stem cells in multiple tissues. Here, we report Lgr5 expression in a subpopulation of chief cells in mouse and human corpus glands. Using a non-variegated Lgr5-2A-CreERT2 mouse model, we show by lineage tracing that Lgr5-expressing chief cells do not behave as corpus stem cells during homeostasis, but are recruited to function as stem cells to effect epithelial renewal following injury by activating Wnt signalling. Ablation of Lgr5+ cells severely impairs epithelial homeostasis in the corpus, indicating an essential role for these Lgr5+ cells in maintaining the homeostatic stem cell pool. We additionally define Lgr5+ chief cells as a major cell-of-origin of gastric cancer. These findings reveal clinically relevant insights into homeostasis, repair and cancer in the corpus.

FOXO1 reduces tumorsphere formation capacity and has crosstalk with LGR5 signaling in gastric cancer cells

Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications

2017 Sep 29

Choi Y, Park J, Ko YS, Kim Y, Pyo JS, Jange BG, Kim MA, Leef JS, Chang MS, Lee BL.
PMID: - | DOI: 10.1016/j.bbrc.2017.09.163

Gastric cancer (GC) is a major of cause of cancer-related death and is characterized by its heterogeneity and molecular complexity. FOXO1 is a transcription factor that plays a key role in GC growth and metastasis. However, the implication of FOXO1 in GC cell stemness has been elusive. This study, for the first time, demonstrates that FOXO1 regulates GC cell stemness in association with LGR5. FOXO1 expression was significantly lower in GC tumorsphere cells than in adherent GC cells. FOXO1 silencing and overexpression promoted and inhibited the tumorsphere formation capacity of GC cells, respectively. Additionally, there was an inverse correlation between FOXO1 and GC stem cell marker LGR5 in human GC specimens. Further in vitro and in vivo experiments showed that negative crosstalk between these two molecules exists and that LGR5 silencing reversed the FOXO1 shRNA-induced tumorsphere formation even without FOXO1 restoration. Taken together, our results suggest that FOXO1 inhibits the self-renewal capacity of GC cells through interaction with LGR5. Thus, FOXO1/LGR5 signaling pathway may provide a novel targeted therapy for GC.

L1CAM defines the regenerative origin of metastasis-initiating cells in colorectal cancer

Nat Cancer

2020 Jan 13

Karuna Ganesh, Harihar Basnet, Yasemin Kaygusuz, Ashley M. Laughney, Lan He, Roshan Sharma, Kevin P. O�Rourke, Vincent P. Reuter, Yun-Han Huang, Mesruh Turkekul, Ekrem Emrah Er, Ignas Masilionis, Katia Manova-Todorova, Martin R. Weiser, Leonard B. Saltz, Julio Garcia-Aguilar, Richard Koche, Scott W. Lowe, Dana Pe�er, Jinru Shia & Joan Massagu�
| DOI: 10.1038/s43018-019-0006-x

Metastasis-initiating cells with stem-like properties drive cancer lethality, yet their origins and relationship to primary-tumor-initiating stem cells are not known. We show that L1CAM+ cells in human colorectal cancer (CRC) have metastasis-initiating capacity, and we define their relationship to tissue regeneration. L1CAM is not expressed in the homeostatic intestinal epithelium, but is induced and required for epithelial regeneration following colitis and in CRC organoid growth. By using human tissues and mouse models, we show that L1CAM is dispensable for adenoma initiation but required for orthotopic carcinoma propagation, liver metastatic colonization and chemoresistance. L1CAMhigh cells partially overlap with LGR5high stem-like cells in human CRC organoids. Disruption of intercellular epithelial contacts causes E-cadherin�REST transcriptional derepression of L1CAM, switching chemoresistant CRC progenitors from an L1CAMlow to an L1CAMhigh state. Thus, L1CAM dependency emerges in regenerative intestinal cells when epithelial integrity is lost, a phenotype of wound healing deployed in metastasis-initiating cells.
Cell-matrix interface regulates dormancy in human colon cancer stem cells

Nature

2022 Jul 07

Ohta, Y;Fujii, M;Takahashi, S;Takano, A;Nanki, K;Matano, M;Hanyu, H;Saito, M;Shimokawa, M;Nishikori, S;Hatano, Y;Ishii, R;Sawada, K;Machinaga, A;Ikeda, W;Imamura, T;Sato, T;
PMID: 35798028 | DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-05043-y

Cancer relapse after chemotherapy remains a main cause of cancer-related death. Although the relapse is thought to result from the propagation of resident cancer stem cells (CSCs)1, a lack of experimental platforms that enable prospective analysis of CSC dynamics with sufficient spatiotemporal resolution has hindered testing of this hypothesis. Here, we develop a live genetic lineage-tracing system that allows longitudinal tracking of individual cells in xenotransplanted human colorectal cancer organoids and identify LGR5+ CSCs that display a dormant behavior in a chemo-naive state. Dormant LGR5+ cells are marked by p27 expression, and intravital imaging directly demonstrates the persistence of LGR5+p27+ cells during chemotherapy, followed by clonal expansion. Transcriptome analysis reveals an upregulation of COL17A1, a cell adhesion molecule that strengthens hemidesmosome, in dormant LGR5+p27+ cells. COL17A1-knockout organoids lose the dormant LGR5+p27+ subpopulation and become sensitive to chemotherapy, suggesting a role of cell-matrix interface in dormancy maintenance. Chemotherapy disrupts COL17A1 and breaks the dormancy in LGR5+p27+ cells through FAK-YAP activation. Abrogation of YAP signaling restrains chemo-resistant cells from exiting dormancy and delays tumor regrowth, highlighting the therapeutic potential of YAP inhibition in preventing cancer relapse. These results offer a viable therapeutic approach to overcome refractoriness of human colorectal cancer to conventional chemotherapy.
Comparative pathology of the nasal epithelium in K18-hACE2 Tg mice, hACE2 Tg mice, and hamsters infected with SARS-CoV-2

Veterinary pathology

2022 Jan 29

Yu, P;Deng, W;Bao, L;Qu, Y;Xu, Y;Zhao, W;Han, Y;Qin, C;
PMID: 35094625 | DOI: 10.1177/03009858211071016

Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) causes severe viral pneumonia and is associated with a high fatality rate. A substantial proportion of patients infected by SARS-CoV-2 suffer from mild hyposmia to complete loss of olfactory function, resulting in anosmia. However, the pathogenesis of the olfactory dysfunction and comparative pathology of upper respiratory infections with SARS-CoV-2 are unknown. We describe the histopathological, immunohistochemical, and in situ hybridization findings from rodent models of SARS-CoV-2 infection. The main histopathological findings in the olfactory epithelia of K8-hACE2 Tg mice, hACE2 Tg mice, and hamsters were varying degrees of inflammatory lesions, including disordered arrangement, necrosis, exfoliation, and macrophage infiltration of the olfactory epithelia, and inflammatory exudation. On the basis of these observations, the nasal epithelia of these rodent models appeared to develop moderate, mild, and severe rhinitis, respectively. Correspondingly, SARS-CoV-2 viral RNA and antigen were mainly identified in the olfactory epithelia and lamina propria. Moreover, viral RNA was abundant in the cerebrum of K18-hACE2 Tg mice, including the olfactory bulb. The K8-hACE2 Tg mouse, hACE2 Tg mouse, and hamster models could be used to investigate the pathology of SARS-CoV-2 infection in the upper respiratory tract and central nervous system. These models could help to provide a better understanding of the pathogenic process of this virus and to develop effective medications and prophylactic treatments.
Host parameters and mode of infection influence outcome in SARS-CoV-2 infected hamsters

iScience

2021 Nov 01

Griffin, B;Warner, B;Chan, M;Valcourt, E;Tailor, N;Banadyga, L;Leung, A;He, S;Boese, A;Audet, J;Cao, W;Moffat, E;Garnett, L;Tierney, K;Tran, K;Albietz, A;Manguiat, K;Soule, G;Bello, A;Vendramelli, R;Lin, J;Deschambault, Y;Zhu, W;Wood, H;Mubareka, S;Safronetz, D;Strong, J;Embury-Hyatt, C;Kobasa, D;
| DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2021.103530

The golden hamster model of SARS-CoV-2 infection recapitulates key characteristics of COVID-19. In this work we examined the influence of the route of exposure, sex, and age on SARS-CoV-2 pathogenesis in hamsters. We report that delivery of SARS-CoV-2 by a low versus high volume intranasal or intragastric route results in comparable viral titers in the lung and viral shedding. However, low-volume intranasal exposure results in milder weight loss while intragastric exposure leads to a diminished capacity to regain body weight. Male hamsters, and particularly older male hamsters, display an impaired capacity to recover from illness and delayed viral clearance. These factors were found to influence the nature of the host inflammatory cytokine response, but had a minimal effect on the quality and durability of the humoral immune response and susceptibility to re-infection. These data further elucidate key factors that impact pre-clinical challenge studies carried out in the hamster model of COVID-19.
Opposing effects of Wnt/β-catenin signaling on epithelial and mesenchymal cell fate in the developing cochlea

Development (Cambridge, England)

2021 Jun 01

Billings, SE;Myers, NM;Quiruz, L;Cheng, AG;
PMID: 34061174 | DOI: 10.1242/dev.199091

During embryonic development, the otic epithelium and surrounding periotic mesenchymal cells originate from distinct lineages and coordinate to form the mammalian cochlea. Epithelial sensory precursors within the cochlear duct first undergo terminal mitosis before differentiating into sensory and non-sensory cells. In parallel, periotic mesenchymal cells differentiate to shape the lateral wall, modiolus and pericochlear spaces. Previously, Wnt activation was shown to promote proliferation and differentiation of both otic epithelial and mesenchymal cells. Here, we fate-mapped Wnt-responsive epithelial and mesenchymal cells in mice and found that Wnt activation resulted in opposing cell fates. In the post-mitotic cochlear epithelium, Wnt activation via β-catenin stabilization induced clusters of proliferative cells that dedifferentiated and lost epithelial characteristics. In contrast, Wnt-activated periotic mesenchyme formed ectopic pericochlear spaces and cell clusters showing a loss of mesenchymal and gain of epithelial features. Finally, clonal analyses via multi-colored fate-mapping showed that Wnt-activated epithelial cells proliferated and formed clonal colonies, whereas Wnt-activated mesenchymal cells assembled as aggregates of mitotically quiescent cells. Together, we show that Wnt activation drives transition between epithelial and mesenchymal states in a cell type-dependent manner.
A single intranasal or intramuscular immunization with chimpanzee adenovirus vectored SARS-CoV-2 vaccine protects against pneumonia in hamsters

Cell Reports

2021 Jun 01

Bricker, T;Darling, T;Hassan, A;Harastani, H;Soung, A;Jiang, X;Dai, Y;Zhao, H;Adams, L;Holtzman, M;Bailey, A;Case, J;Fremont, D;Klein, R;Diamond, M;Boon, A;
| DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2021.109400

The development of an effective vaccine against SARS-CoV-2, the etiologic agent of COVID-19, is a global priority. Here, we compared the protective capacity of intranasal and intramuscular delivery of a chimpanzee adenovirus-vectored vaccine encoding a pre-fusion stabilized spike protein (ChAd-SARS-CoV-2-S) in Golden Syrian hamsters. While immunization with ChAd-SARS-CoV-2-S induced robust spike protein specific antibodies capable of neutralizing the virus, antibody levels in serum were higher in hamsters vaccinated by an intranasal compared to intramuscular route. Accordingly, against challenge with SARS-CoV-2, ChAd-SARS-CoV-2-S immunized hamsters were protected against less weight loss and had reduced viral infection in nasal swabs and lungs, and reduced pathology and inflammatory gene expression in the lungs, compared to ChAd-Control immunized hamsters. Intranasal immunization with ChAd-SARS-CoV-2-S provided superior protection against SARS-CoV-2 infection and inflammation in the upper respiratory tract. These findings support intranasal administration of the ChAd-SARS-CoV-2-S candidate vaccine to prevent SARS-CoV-2 infection, disease, and possibly transmission.
Single-cell sequencing reveals suppressive transcriptional programs regulated by MIS/AMH in neonatal ovaries

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

2021 May 18

Meinsohn, MC;Saatcioglu, HD;Wei, L;Li, Y;Horn, H;Chauvin, M;Kano, M;Nguyen, NMP;Nagykery, N;Kashiwagi, A;Samore, WR;Wang, D;Oliva, E;Gao, G;Morris, ME;Donahoe, PK;Pépin, D;
PMID: 33980714 | DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2100920118

Müllerian inhibiting substance (MIS/AMH), produced by granulosa cells of growing follicles, is an important regulator of folliculogenesis and follicle development. Treatment with exogenous MIS in mice suppresses follicle development and prevents ovulation. To investigate the mechanisms by which MIS inhibits follicle development, we performed single-cell RNA sequencing of whole neonatal ovaries treated with MIS at birth and analyzed at postnatal day 6, coinciding with the first wave of follicle growth. We identified distinct transcriptional signatures associated with MIS responses in the ovarian cell types. MIS treatment inhibited proliferation in granulosa, surface epithelial, and stromal cell types of the ovary and elicited a unique signature of quiescence in granulosa cells. In addition to decreasing the number of growing preantral follicles, we found that MIS treatment uncoupled the maturation of germ cells and granulosa cells. In conclusion, MIS suppressed neonatal follicle development by inhibiting proliferation, imposing a quiescent cell state, and preventing granulosa cell differentiation.

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sense
Example: Hs-LAG3-sense
Standard probes for RNA detection are in antisense. Sense probe is reverse complent to the corresponding antisense probe.
Intron#
Example: Mm-Htt-intron2
Probe targets the indicated intron in the target gene, commonly used for pre-mRNA detection
Pool/Pan
Example: Hs-CD3-pool (Hs-CD3D, Hs-CD3E, Hs-CD3G)
A mixture of multiple probe sets targeting multiple genes or transcripts
No-XSp
Example: Hs-PDGFB-No-XMm
Does not cross detect with the species (Sp)
XSp
Example: Rn-Pde9a-XMm
designed to cross detect with the species (Sp)
O#
Example: Mm-Islr-O1
Alternative design targeting different regions of the same transcript or isoforms
CDS
Example: Hs-SLC31A-CDS
Probe targets the protein-coding sequence only
EnEmProbe targets exons n and m
En-EmProbe targets region from exon n to exon m
Retired Nomenclature
tvn
Example: Hs-LEPR-tv1
Designed to target transcript variant n
ORF
Example: Hs-ACVRL1-ORF
Probe targets open reading frame
UTR
Example: Hs-HTT-UTR-C3
Probe targets the untranslated region (non-protein-coding region) only
5UTR
Example: Hs-GNRHR-5UTR
Probe targets the 5' untranslated region only
3UTR
Example: Rn-Npy1r-3UTR
Probe targets the 3' untranslated region only
Pan
Example: Pool
A mixture of multiple probe sets targeting multiple genes or transcripts

Enabling research, drug development (CDx) and diagnostics

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