Extracellular vesicles transmit epithelial growth factor activity in the intestinal stem cell niche

Author:

Oszvald Ádám1,Szvicsek Zsuzsanna1,Sándor Gyöngyvér Orsolya1,Kelemen Andrea1,Soós András Áron1,Pálóczi Krisztina1,Bursics Attila2,Dede Kristóf2,Tölgyes Tamás2,Buzás Edit I.134,Zeöld Anikó1,Wiener Zoltán1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Genetics, Cell and Immunobiology, Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary

2. Uzsoki Hospital Budapest, Budapest, Hungary

3. MTA-SE Immune-Proteogenomics Extracellular Vesicle Research Group, Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary

4. HCEMM-SE Extracellular Vesicle Research Group, Budapest, Hungary

Abstract

Abstract Extracellular vesicles (EV) are membrane-surrounded vesicles that represent a novel way of intercellular communication by carrying biologically important molecules in a concentrated and protected form. The intestinal epithelium is continuously renewed by a small proliferating intestinal stem cell (ISC) population, residing at the bottom of the intestinal crypts in a specific microenvironment, the stem cell niche. By using 3D mouse and human intestinal organoids, we show that intestinal fibroblast-derived EVs are involved in forming the ISC niche by transmitting Wnt and epidermal growth factor (EGF) activity. With a mouse model that expresses EGFP in the Lgr5+ ISCs, we prove that loss in ISC number in the absence of EGF is prevented by fibroblast-derived EVs. Furthermore, we demonstrate that intestinal fibroblast-derived EVs carry EGF family members, such as amphiregulin. Mechanistically, blocking EV-bound amphiregulin inhibited the EV-induced survival of organoids. In contrast, EVs have no role in transporting R-Spondin, a critical niche factor amplifying Wnt signaling. Collectively, we prove the important role of fibroblast-derived EVs as a novel transmission mechanism of factors in the normal ISC niche.

Funder

Ministry of Human Capacities, Hungary

National Research, Development and Innovation Office, Hungary

International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology, Italy

Emberi Eroforrások Minisztériuma

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cell Biology,Developmental Biology,Molecular Medicine

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