The analysis of methylation patterns is a promising approach to investigate the genealogy of cell populations in an organism. In a stem cell–niche scenario, sampled methylation patterns are the stochastic outcome of a complex interplay between niche structural features such as the number of stem cells within a niche and the niche succession time, the methylation/demethylation process, and the randomness due to sampling. As a consequence, methylation pattern studies can reveal niche characteristics but also require appropriate statistical methods. The analysis of methylation patterns sampled from colon crypts is a prototype of such a study. Previous analyses were based on forward simulation of the cell content of the whole crypt and subseque...
The question of stem cell control is at the center of our understanding of tissue functioning, both ...
In cancer prevention research, intermediate markers are often used. In colon cancer one such biomark...
This study was supported by Cancer Research UK (to A.-M.B. and N.A.W.), the Medical Research Council...
International audienceThe analysis of methylation patterns is a promising approach to investigate th...
Objectives: Colonic stem cells are thought to reside towards the base of crypts of the colon, but th...
Abstract Background The ability to discern ancestral relationships between individual human colon cr...
PhD thesisThe clonal history of a cell is recorded within its (epi)genome via the accumulation of he...
Human intestinal stem cell and crypt dynamics remain poorly characterized because transgenic lineage...
SummaryHuman intestinal stem cell and crypt dynamics remain poorly characterized because transgenic ...
The human colon contains about 15 million crypts, each of which contains about 2,000 cells. Some of ...
Methylation patterns present in a cell population can inform us about the way the cells are organize...
Human intestinal stem cell and crypt dynamics remain poorly characterized because transgenic lineage...
Human intestinal stem cell and crypt dynamics remain poorly characterized because transgenic lineage...
Background: In vertebrate genomes, CpG sites can be clustered into CpG islands, and the amount of me...
Motivation: Methylation of CpG dinucleotides is a prevalent epigenetic modification that is required...
The question of stem cell control is at the center of our understanding of tissue functioning, both ...
In cancer prevention research, intermediate markers are often used. In colon cancer one such biomark...
This study was supported by Cancer Research UK (to A.-M.B. and N.A.W.), the Medical Research Council...
International audienceThe analysis of methylation patterns is a promising approach to investigate th...
Objectives: Colonic stem cells are thought to reside towards the base of crypts of the colon, but th...
Abstract Background The ability to discern ancestral relationships between individual human colon cr...
PhD thesisThe clonal history of a cell is recorded within its (epi)genome via the accumulation of he...
Human intestinal stem cell and crypt dynamics remain poorly characterized because transgenic lineage...
SummaryHuman intestinal stem cell and crypt dynamics remain poorly characterized because transgenic ...
The human colon contains about 15 million crypts, each of which contains about 2,000 cells. Some of ...
Methylation patterns present in a cell population can inform us about the way the cells are organize...
Human intestinal stem cell and crypt dynamics remain poorly characterized because transgenic lineage...
Human intestinal stem cell and crypt dynamics remain poorly characterized because transgenic lineage...
Background: In vertebrate genomes, CpG sites can be clustered into CpG islands, and the amount of me...
Motivation: Methylation of CpG dinucleotides is a prevalent epigenetic modification that is required...
The question of stem cell control is at the center of our understanding of tissue functioning, both ...
In cancer prevention research, intermediate markers are often used. In colon cancer one such biomark...
This study was supported by Cancer Research UK (to A.-M.B. and N.A.W.), the Medical Research Council...