The intestinal stem cell markers Bmi1 and Lgr5 identify two functionally distinct populations

KS Yan, LA Chia, X Li, A Ootani, J Su… - Proceedings of the …, 2012 - National Acad Sciences
KS Yan, LA Chia, X Li, A Ootani, J Su, JY Lee, N Su, Y Luo, SC Heilshorn, MR Amieva
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2012National Acad Sciences
The small intestine epithelium undergoes rapid and continuous regeneration supported by
crypt intestinal stem cells (ISCs). Bmi1 and Lgr5 have been independently identified to mark
long-lived multipotent ISCs by lineage tracing in mice; however, the functional distinctions
between these two populations remain undefined. Here, we demonstrate that Bmi1 and Lgr5
mark two functionally distinct ISCs in vivo. Lgr5 marks mitotically active ISCs that exhibit
exquisite sensitivity to canonical Wnt modulation, contribute robustly to homeostatic …
The small intestine epithelium undergoes rapid and continuous regeneration supported by crypt intestinal stem cells (ISCs). Bmi1 and Lgr5 have been independently identified to mark long-lived multipotent ISCs by lineage tracing in mice; however, the functional distinctions between these two populations remain undefined. Here, we demonstrate that Bmi1 and Lgr5 mark two functionally distinct ISCs in vivo. Lgr5 marks mitotically active ISCs that exhibit exquisite sensitivity to canonical Wnt modulation, contribute robustly to homeostatic regeneration, and are quantitatively ablated by irradiation. In contrast, Bmi1 marks quiescent ISCs that are insensitive to Wnt perturbations, contribute weakly to homeostatic regeneration, and are resistant to high-dose radiation injury. After irradiation, however, the normally quiescent Bmi1+ ISCs dramatically proliferate to clonally repopulate multiple contiguous crypts and villi. Clonogenic culture of isolated single Bmi1+ ISCs yields long-lived self-renewing spheroids of intestinal epithelium that produce Lgr5-expressing cells, thereby establishing a lineage relationship between these two populations in vitro. Taken together, these data provide direct evidence that Bmi1 marks quiescent, injury-inducible reserve ISCs that exhibit striking functional distinctions from Lgr5+ ISCs and support a model whereby distinct ISC populations facilitate homeostatic vs. injury-induced regeneration.
National Acad Sciences