SummaryHuman intestinal stem cell and crypt dynamics remain poorly characterized because transgenic lineage-tracing methods are impractical in humans. Here, we have circumvented this problem by quantitatively using somatic mtDNA mutations to trace clonal lineages. By analyzing clonal imprints on the walls of colonic crypts, we show that human intestinal stem cells conform to one-dimensional neutral drift dynamics with a “functional” stem cell number of five to six in both normal patients and individuals with familial adenomatous polyposis (germline APC−/+). Furthermore, we show that, in adenomatous crypts (APC−/−), there is a proportionate increase in both functional stem cell number and the loss/replacement rate. Finally, by analyzing fiel...
Decades ago, two nonoverlapping crypt stem cell populations were proposed: Leblond’s Crypt Base Colu...
We investigated the means and timing by which mutations become fixed in the human colonic epithelium...
All cancers were once normal cells. They became cancerous through the chance acquisition of particul...
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 ...
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...
This study was supported by Cancer Research UK (to A.-M.B. and N.A.W.), the Medical Research Council...
SummaryLineage-tracing approaches, widely used to characterize stem cell populations, rely on the sp...
PhD thesisThe clonal history of a cell is recorded within its (epi)genome via the accumulation of he...
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 ...
The intestinal mucosa is a monolayer of rapidly self-renewing epithelial cells which is not only res...
Stem cell (SC) dynamics within the human colorectal crypt SC niche remain poorly understood, with pr...
Stem cell (SC) dynamics within the human colorectal crypt SC niche remain poorly understood, with pr...
Decades ago, two nonoverlapping crypt stem cell populations were proposed: Leblond’s Crypt Base Colu...
We investigated the means and timing by which mutations become fixed in the human colonic epithelium...
All cancers were once normal cells. They became cancerous through the chance acquisition of particul...
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 ...
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...
This study was supported by Cancer Research UK (to A.-M.B. and N.A.W.), the Medical Research Council...
SummaryLineage-tracing approaches, widely used to characterize stem cell populations, rely on the sp...
PhD thesisThe clonal history of a cell is recorded within its (epi)genome via the accumulation of he...
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 ...
The intestinal mucosa is a monolayer of rapidly self-renewing epithelial cells which is not only res...
Stem cell (SC) dynamics within the human colorectal crypt SC niche remain poorly understood, with pr...
Stem cell (SC) dynamics within the human colorectal crypt SC niche remain poorly understood, with pr...
Decades ago, two nonoverlapping crypt stem cell populations were proposed: Leblond’s Crypt Base Colu...
We investigated the means and timing by which mutations become fixed in the human colonic epithelium...
All cancers were once normal cells. They became cancerous through the chance acquisition of particul...