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Corrigendum2 October 2017free access Wnt activity and basal niche position sensitize intestinal stem and progenitor cells to DNA damage Si Tao Si Tao Search for more papers by this author Duozhuang Tang Duozhuang Tang Search for more papers by this author Yohei Morita Yohei Morita Search for more papers by this author Tobias Sperka Tobias Sperka Search for more papers by this author Omid Omrani Omid Omrani Search for more papers by this author André Lechel André Lechel Search for more papers by this author Vadim Sakk Vadim Sakk Search for more papers by this author Johann Kraus Johann Kraus Search for more papers by this author Hans A Kestler Hans A Kestler Search for more papers by this author Michael Kühl Michael Kühl Search for more papers by this author Karl Lenhard Rudolph Karl Lenhard Rudolph Search for more papers by this author Si Tao Si Tao Search for more papers by this author Duozhuang Tang Duozhuang Tang Search for more papers by this author Yohei Morita Yohei Morita Search for more papers by this author Tobias Sperka Tobias Sperka Search for more papers by this author Omid Omrani Omid Omrani Search for more papers by this author André Lechel André Lechel Search for more papers by this author Vadim Sakk Vadim Sakk Search for more papers by this author Johann Kraus Johann Kraus Search for more papers by this author Hans A Kestler Hans A Kestler Search for more papers by this author Michael Kühl Michael Kühl Search for more papers by this author Karl Lenhard Rudolph Karl Lenhard Rudolph Search for more papers by this author Author Information Si Tao, Duozhuang Tang, Yohei Morita, Tobias Sperka, Omid Omrani, André Lechel, Vadim Sakk, Johann Kraus, Hans A Kestler, Michael Kühl and Karl Lenhard Rudolph The EMBO Journal (2017)36:2920-2921https://doi.org/10.15252/embj.201797813 This article corrects the following: Wnt activity and basal niche position sensitize intestinal stem and progenitor cells to DNA damage21 January 2015 ToolsAdd to favoritesDownload CitationsTrack CitationsPermissions ShareFacebookTwitterLinked InMendeleyWechatReddit Figures & Info The authors state that it came to their attention that the figure legends of two figures were not sufficiently detailed in the original version of the manuscript. The figure legend of Fig 1E and F should read: A single representative FACS plot was chosen to illustrate (E) the gating of LGR5hi and LGR5lo populations within the population of LGR5+ (GFP-positive) intestinal cells and (F) the gating of LGR5hi-high, LGR5hi-low, LGR5lo-high, and LGR5lo-low populations. The same FACS plot is displayed in (E) and (F). The figure legend of Fig 6C should read: Representative Western blots of cell lysates for the expression of phospho-p53 and cleaved caspase-3 (each n = 3; see Source Data for this figure). Samples from a single experiment were divided into identical portions and probed for phospho-p53 or cleaved casp3. The expression control of beta-actin was conducted on the second aliquot of the samples and was run in parallel on a separate gel. The corrections do not affect the original conclusions presented. We apologize for the lack of detail and any inconvenience it may have caused. Editorial Note These changes were based on the results of an investigation of the Leibniz Association. All authors agree with this correction. Source data for Figure 6C. Previous ArticleNext Article Read MoreAbout the coverClose modalView large imageVolume 36,Issue 19,02 October 2017Cover: Deregulation of the actin cytoskeleton regulator Formin 2 is a common denominator of post-traumatic stress disorders and age-dependent Alzheimer’s disease phenotypes, possibly explaining their clinical connection. From Roberto Carlos Agís-Balboa, Andre Fischer, Farahnaz Sananbenesi and colleagues: Formin 2 links neuropsychiatric phenotypes at young age to an increased risk for dementia. or details, see the Article on p 2815, also highlighted by Johannes Gräff on p 2809. (Illustration by Uta Mackensen) Volume 36Issue 192 October 2017In this issue RelatedDetailsLoading ...

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