4.8 Article

WNT-SHH Antagonism Specifies and Expands Stem Cells prior to Niche Formation

Journal

CELL
Volume 164, Issue 1-2, Pages 156-169

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2015.11.058

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Rockefeller University Women and Science
  2. National Science Foundation [DBI-1401728]
  3. NIH [T32-CA009673-37, R37-AR27883, R01-AR31737]
  4. Div Of Biological Infrastructure
  5. Direct For Biological Sciences [1401728] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Adult stem cell (SC) maintenance and differentiation are known to depend on signals received from the niche. Here, however, we demonstrate a mechanism for SC specification and regulation that is niche independent. Using immunofluorescence, live imaging, genetics, cell-cycle analyses, in utero lentiviral transduction, and lineage-tracing, we show that in developing hair buds, SCs are born from asymmetric divisions that differentially display WNT and SHH signaling. Displaced WNTlo suprabasal daughters become SCs that respond to paracrine SHH and symmetrically expand. By contrast, basal daughters remain WNThi. They express but do not respond to SHH and hence maintain slow-cycling, asymmetric divisions. Over time, they become short-lived progenitors, generating differentiating daughters rather than SCs. Thus, in contrast to an established niche that harbors a fixed SC pool whose expelled progeny differentiate, asymmetric divisions first specify and displace early SCs into an environment conducive to expansion and later restrict their numbers by switching asymmetric fates.

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