Cell Stem Cell
Volume 23, Issue 3, 6 September 2018, Pages 436-443.e7
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Short Article
Phospho-regulation of ATOH1 Is Required for Plasticity of Secretory Progenitors and Tissue Regeneration

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.stem.2018.07.002Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Atoh1+ progenitors contribute to the stem cell pool in homeostasis and regeneration

  • Multisite phosphorylation of ATOH1 regulates the plasticity of secretory progenitors

  • Loss of phosphorylation of ATOH1 reduces clonogenic capacity of Atoh1+ cells

  • Phosphomutant ATOH1 mice are more susceptible to chemical colitis

Summary

The intestinal epithelium is largely maintained by self-renewing stem cells but with apparently committed progenitors also contributing, particularly following tissue damage. However, the mechanism of, and requirement for, progenitor plasticity in mediating pathological response remain unknown. Here we show that phosphorylation of the transcription factor Atoh1 is required for both the contribution of secretory progenitors to the stem cell pool and for a robust regenerative response. As confirmed by lineage tracing, Atoh1+ cells (Atoh1(WT)CreERT2 mice) give rise to multilineage intestinal clones both in the steady state and after tissue damage. In a phosphomutant Atoh1(9S/T-A)CreERT2 line, preventing phosphorylation of ATOH1 protein acts to promote secretory differentiation and inhibit the contribution of progenitors to self-renewal. Following chemical colitis, Atoh1+ cells of Atoh1(9S/T-A)CreERT2 mice have reduced clonogenicity that affects overall regeneration. Progenitor plasticity maintains robust self-renewal in the intestinal epithelium, and the balance between stem and progenitor fate is directly coordinated by ATOH1 multisite phosphorylation.

Keywords

Atoh1
plasticity
phosphorylation
intestinal stem cell
secretory progenitor

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