SummaryIntestinal stem cells, characterized by high Lgr5 expression, reside between Paneth cells at the small intestinal crypt base and divide every day. We have carried out fate mapping of individual stem cells by generating a multicolor Cre-reporter. As a population, Lgr5hi stem cells persist life-long, yet crypts drift toward clonality within a period of 1–6 months. We have collected short- and long-term clonal tracing data of individual Lgr5hi cells. These reveal that most Lgr5hi cell divisions occur symmetrically and do not support a model in which two daughter cells resulting from an Lgr5hi cell division adopt divergent fates (i.e., one Lgr5hi cell and one transit-amplifying [TA] cell per division). The cellular dynamics are consisten...
Somatic cells have been proposed to be limited in the number of cell divisions they can undergo. Thi...
The stem cells (SCs) at the bottom of intestinal crypts tightly contact niche-supporting cells and f...
The intestinal epithelium is the most rapidly self-renewing tissue in adult mammals. We have recentl...
SummaryIntestinal stem cells, characterized by high Lgr5 expression, reside between Paneth cells at ...
The rapid turnover of the mammalian intestinal epithelium is supported by stem cells located around ...
SummaryThe pyloric epithelium continuously self-renews throughout life, driven by limited reservoirs...
The pyloric epithelium continuously self-renews throughout life, driven by limited reservoirs of res...
Decades ago, two nonoverlapping crypt stem cell populations were proposed: Leblond’s Crypt Base Colu...
Two recent studies continue the debate regarding lineage and hierarchy in the intestinal epithelium....
The identification of the intestinal stem cell (ISC) markers Lgr5 and Bmi-1 has furthered our unders...
As a rapidly cycling tissue capable of fast repair and regeneration, the intestinal epithelium has e...
Cycling Lgr5+ stem cells fuel the rapid turnover of the adult intestinal epithelium. The existence o...
SummaryThe small intestinal epithelium is the most rapidly self-renewing tissue of mammals. Prolifer...
SummaryLineage-tracing approaches, widely used to characterize stem cell populations, rely on the sp...
SummaryIntestinal crypts in mammals are comprised of long-lived stem cells and shorter-lived progeni...
Somatic cells have been proposed to be limited in the number of cell divisions they can undergo. Thi...
The stem cells (SCs) at the bottom of intestinal crypts tightly contact niche-supporting cells and f...
The intestinal epithelium is the most rapidly self-renewing tissue in adult mammals. We have recentl...
SummaryIntestinal stem cells, characterized by high Lgr5 expression, reside between Paneth cells at ...
The rapid turnover of the mammalian intestinal epithelium is supported by stem cells located around ...
SummaryThe pyloric epithelium continuously self-renews throughout life, driven by limited reservoirs...
The pyloric epithelium continuously self-renews throughout life, driven by limited reservoirs of res...
Decades ago, two nonoverlapping crypt stem cell populations were proposed: Leblond’s Crypt Base Colu...
Two recent studies continue the debate regarding lineage and hierarchy in the intestinal epithelium....
The identification of the intestinal stem cell (ISC) markers Lgr5 and Bmi-1 has furthered our unders...
As a rapidly cycling tissue capable of fast repair and regeneration, the intestinal epithelium has e...
Cycling Lgr5+ stem cells fuel the rapid turnover of the adult intestinal epithelium. The existence o...
SummaryThe small intestinal epithelium is the most rapidly self-renewing tissue of mammals. Prolifer...
SummaryLineage-tracing approaches, widely used to characterize stem cell populations, rely on the sp...
SummaryIntestinal crypts in mammals are comprised of long-lived stem cells and shorter-lived progeni...
Somatic cells have been proposed to be limited in the number of cell divisions they can undergo. Thi...
The stem cells (SCs) at the bottom of intestinal crypts tightly contact niche-supporting cells and f...
The intestinal epithelium is the most rapidly self-renewing tissue in adult mammals. We have recentl...