Abstract

The Paneth cell lineage is one of four epithelial lineages derived from the adult mouse small intestine's multipotent stem cell. Mature Paneth cells secrete antimicrobial peptides (cryptdins), growth factors, as well as two gene products, a secreted phospholipase A2 and matrilysin, that has been implicated as modifiers of adenoma formation in mice containing a mutation in the tumor suppressor Apc. Immature Paneth cells are located just above and below the cell layer, in intestinal crypts, that has been proposed to contain the multipotent stem cell. Paneth cells differentiate during a downward migration to the crypt base. The location and direction of Paneth cell migration, their high density and long residency time at the crypt base, and the nature of their secreted gene products, suggest that they may influence the structure and/or function of the stem cell niche. Paneth cell ablation can therefore be viewed as an experimental manipulation of the cellular microenvironment that purportedly contains the stem cell and its immediate descendants. Two types of ablation experiments were performed in transgenic mice. Nucleotides -6500 to +34 of the mouse cryptdin-2 gene (CR2) were used to express an attenuated diphtheria toxin A fragment. Light and electron microscopic immunohistochemical analyses of several pedigrees of postnatal day 28 to 180 animals established that ablation of Paneth cells is accompanied by an increase in the proportion of undifferentiated crypt base columnar cells. These cells normally co-exist with Paneth cells. The ablation does not produce a detectable effect on the proliferation or terminal differentiation programs of the other three lineages or on host-microbial interactions. The last conclusion is based on the ability of crypts to remain free of microbes detectable by Gram and Warthin-Starry stains and by retention of the normal crypt-villus distribution of components of the diffuse gut-associated lymphoid tissue. CR2-directed expression of simian virus 40 large T antigen also results in a loss of mature Paneth cells but produces a marked amplification of crypt cells having a morphology intermediate between Paneth and granule goblet cells. EM immunohistochemical analyses suggest that intermediate cells can differentiate to mature goblet cells but not to Paneth cells, as they migrate up the crypt-villus axis. Our findings suggest that (i) stemness in the crypt is not defined by instructive interactions involving the Paneth cell; (ii) expressing a Paneth cell fate may require that precursors migrate to the crypt base; (iii) antimicrobial factors produced by Paneth cells are not required to prevent colonization of small intestinal crypts; and (iv) this lineage does not function to maintain the asymmetric crypt-villus distribution of components of the diffuse gut-associated lymphoid tissue.

Highlights

  • Eth cell fate may require that precursors migrate to the crypt base; (iii) antimicrobial factors produced by Paneth cells are not required to prevent colonization of small intestinal crypts; and (iv) this lineage does not function to maintain the asymmetric crypt-villus distribution of components of the diffuse gut-associated lymphoid tissue

  • They can be recognized based on staining of their characteristic apical secretory granules with tartrazine, by their reaction with antibodies directed against lysozyme, the secreted phospholipase encoded by Pla2g2a, and cryptdins, as well as by their production of fucosylated glycoconjugates detected by the lectins Urex europaeus agglutinin type 1 (UEA1), peanut (Arachis hypogaea) agglutinin (PNA), and Dolichos biflorus agglutinin (DBA) [32, 42]

  • Its granules contain electrondense cores that are intermediate in size between those in granule goblet cells and those in the apical granules of young Paneth cells (Fig. 1, A–C)

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Summary

Effects of Paneth Cell Ablation

Ase, is limited to the Paneth cell lineage in the adult mouse intestine [18]. The protein is expressed in a high percentage of early stage human colorectal neoplasms and Min adenomas [19]. Pla g2a encodes a phospholipase A2 that is secreted from Paneth cells (20 –22). This gene is a strong candidate for Mom, a semi-dominant modifier of adenoma size and multiplicity in Min/ϩ animals [23,24,25]. The fact that different cryptdins exhibit distinct developmental and spatial patterns of expression along this axis [30] suggests that Paneth cells could play a role in modulating the composition of the microbiota or contribute to mucosal barrier functions. We have examined the contribution of this lineage to epithelial and microbial homeostasis by generating two types of transgenic mice in which mature Paneth cells have been eliminated

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