4.7 Article

Cdx2 determines the fate of postnatal intestinal endoderm

Journal

DEVELOPMENT
Volume 139, Issue 3, Pages 465-474

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/dev.070722

Keywords

Cdx2; Intestine; Stem cell; Endoderm; Mesoderm; Barx1; Mouse

Funding

  1. Association for International Cancer Research (AICR) [08-0199]
  2. Wellcome Trust
  3. Dutch Government [Bsik03038]
  4. Netherlands Institute of Regenerative medicine
  5. Dutch Earth and Life Sciences [NWO ALW]
  6. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [23890204] Funding Source: KAKEN
  7. Cancer Research UK [17044] Funding Source: researchfish

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Knock out of intestinal Cdx2 produces different effects depending upon the developmental stage at which this occurs. Early in development it produces histologically ordered stomach mucosa in the midgut. Conditional inactivation of Cdx2 in adult intestinal epithelium, as well as specifically in the Lgr5-positive stem cells, of adult mice allows long-term survival of the animals but fails to produce this phenotype. Instead, the endodermal cells exhibit cell-autonomous expression of gastric genes in an intestinal setting that is not accompanied by mesodermal expression of Barx1, which is necessary for gastric morphogenesis. Cdx2-negative endodermal cells also fail to express Sox2, a marker of gastric morphogenesis. Maturation of the stem cell niche thus appears to be associated with loss of ability to express positional information cues that are required for normal stomach development. Cdx2-negative intestinal crypts produce subsurface cystic vesicles, whereas untargeted crypts hypertrophy to later replace the surface epithelium. These observations are supported by studies involving inactivation of Cdx2 in intestinal crypts cultured in vitro. This abolishes their ability to form long-term growing intestinal organoids that differentiate into intestinal phenotypes. We conclude that expression of Cdx2 is essential for differentiation of gut stem cells into any of the intestinal cell types, but they maintain a degree of cell-autonomous plasticity that allows them to switch on a variety of gastric genes.

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