Objective The crypt population in the human intestine is dynamic: crypts can divide to produce two new daughter crypts through a process termed crypt fission, but whether this is balanced by a second process to remove crypts, as recently shown in mouse models, is uncertain. We examined whether crypt fusion (the process of two neighbouring crypts fusing into a single daughter crypt) occurs in the human colon. Design We used somatic alterations in the gene cytochrome c oxidase (CCO) as lineage tracing markers to assess the clonality of bifurcating colon crypts (n=309 bifurcating crypts from 13 patients). Mathematical modelling was used to determine whether the existence of crypt fusion can explain the experimental data, and how the process of...
Human intestinal stem cell and crypt dynamics remain poorly characterized because transgenic lineage...
The crypts of the intestinal epithelium house the stem cells that ensure the continual renewal of th...
The understanding of the fixation of mutations within human tissues and their subsequent clonal expa...
OBJECTIVE: The crypt population in the human intestine is dynamic: crypts can divide to produce two ...
OBJECTIVE: The crypt population in the human intestine is dynamic: crypts can divide to produce two ...
Background & Aims: Colorectal cancer (CRC) is thought to arise when the cumulative mutational burden...
Background & Aims Colorectal cancer (CRC) is thought to arise when the cumulative mutational bur...
SummaryHuman intestinal stem cell and crypt dynamics remain poorly characterized because transgenic ...
Human intestinal stem cell and crypt dynamics remain poorly characterized because transgenic lineage...
The intestinal epithelium is a repetitive sheet of crypt and villus units with stem cells at the bot...
PhD thesisThe clonal history of a cell is recorded within its (epi)genome via the accumulation of he...
The process of crypt formation and the roles of Wnt and cell-cell adhesion signaling in cryptogenesi...
This study was supported by Cancer Research UK (to A.-M.B. and N.A.W.), the Medical Research Council...
Human intestinal stem cell and crypt dynamics remain poorly characterized because transgenic lineage...
The mechanisms of how DNA mutations are fixed within the human gastrointestinal tract and how they s...
Human intestinal stem cell and crypt dynamics remain poorly characterized because transgenic lineage...
The crypts of the intestinal epithelium house the stem cells that ensure the continual renewal of th...
The understanding of the fixation of mutations within human tissues and their subsequent clonal expa...
OBJECTIVE: The crypt population in the human intestine is dynamic: crypts can divide to produce two ...
OBJECTIVE: The crypt population in the human intestine is dynamic: crypts can divide to produce two ...
Background & Aims: Colorectal cancer (CRC) is thought to arise when the cumulative mutational burden...
Background & Aims Colorectal cancer (CRC) is thought to arise when the cumulative mutational bur...
SummaryHuman intestinal stem cell and crypt dynamics remain poorly characterized because transgenic ...
Human intestinal stem cell and crypt dynamics remain poorly characterized because transgenic lineage...
The intestinal epithelium is a repetitive sheet of crypt and villus units with stem cells at the bot...
PhD thesisThe clonal history of a cell is recorded within its (epi)genome via the accumulation of he...
The process of crypt formation and the roles of Wnt and cell-cell adhesion signaling in cryptogenesi...
This study was supported by Cancer Research UK (to A.-M.B. and N.A.W.), the Medical Research Council...
Human intestinal stem cell and crypt dynamics remain poorly characterized because transgenic lineage...
The mechanisms of how DNA mutations are fixed within the human gastrointestinal tract and how they s...
Human intestinal stem cell and crypt dynamics remain poorly characterized because transgenic lineage...
The crypts of the intestinal epithelium house the stem cells that ensure the continual renewal of th...
The understanding of the fixation of mutations within human tissues and their subsequent clonal expa...