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Lrig1 controls intestinal stem-cell homeostasis by negative regulation of ErbB signalling

  • Vivian W.Y. Wong
  • , Daniel E. Stange
  • , Mahalia E. Page
  • , Simon Buczacki
  • , Agnieszka Wabik
  • , Satoshi Itami
  • , Marc Van De Wetering
  • , Richard Poulsom
  • , Nicholas A. Wright
  • , Matthew W.B. Trotter
  • , Fiona M. Watt
  • , Doug J. Winton
  • , Hans Clevers
  • , Kim B. Jensen

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

356 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Maintenance of adult tissues is carried out by stem cells and is sustained throughout life in a highly ordered manner. Homeostasis within the stem-cell compartment is governed by positive-and negative-feedback regulation of instructive extrinsic and intrinsic signals. ErbB signalling is a prerequisite for maintenance of the intestinal epithelium following injury and tumour formation. As ErbB-family ligands and receptors are highly expressed within the stem-cell niche, we hypothesize that strong endogenous regulators must control the pathway in the stem-cell compartment. Here we show that Lrig1, a negative-feedback regulator of the ErbB receptor family, is highly expressed by intestinal stem cells and controls the size of the intestinal stem-cell niche by regulating the amplitude of growth-factor signalling. Intestinal stem-cell maintenance has so far been attributed to a combination of Wnt and Notch activation and Bmpr inhibition. Our findings reveal ErbB activation as a strong inductive signal for stem-cell proliferation. This has implications for our understanding of ErbB signalling in tissue development and maintenance and the progression of malignant disease.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)401-408
Number of pages8
JournalNature Cell Biology
Volume14
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2012
Externally publishedYes

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