4.7 Article

Airway basal stem cells reutilize the embryonic proliferation regulator, Tgfβ-Id2 axis, for tissue regeneration

Journal

DEVELOPMENTAL CELL
Volume 56, Issue 13, Pages 1917-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.devcel.2021.05.016

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ministry of Education and Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, Japan [20H03693, 19K17691]
  2. RIKEN BDR-Otsuka Pharmaceutical Collaboration Center (RBOC)
  3. Special Postdoctoral Researcher (SPDR) Program of RIKEN
  4. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [19K17691, 20H03693] Funding Source: KAKEN

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During development, TGF-beta signaling inhibits Id2 to slow down the cell cycle and specify slow-cycling basal cells. In adult tissue regeneration, reduced TGF-beta signaling restores Id2 expression and initiates regeneration.
During development, quiescent airway basal stem cells are derived from proliferative primordial progenitors through the cell-cycle slowdown. In contrast, basal cells contribute to adult tissue regeneration by shifting from slow cycling to proliferating and subsequently back to slow cycling. Although sustained proliferation results in tumorigenesis, the molecular mechanisms regulating these transitions remain unknown. Using temporal single-cell transcriptomics of developing murine airway progenitors and genetic validation experiments, we found that TGF-beta signaling decelerated cell cycle by inhibiting Id2 and contributed to slow-cycling basal cell specification during development. In adult tissue regeneration, reduced TGF-beta signaling restored Id2 expression and initiated regeneration. Id2 overexpression and Tgfbr2 knockout enhanced epithelial proliferation; however, persistent Id2 expression drove basal cell hyperplasia that resembled a precancerous state. Together, the TGF-beta-Id2 axis commonly regulates the proliferation transitions in basal cells during development and regeneration, and its fine-tuning is critical for normal regeneration while avoiding basal cell hyperplasia.

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