1. DeMISTifying Paneth Cell Maturation
- Author
-
Lillian B. Spatz and Jason C. Mills
- Subjects
Paneth Cells ,Cellular differentiation ,Cell Growth Process ,Biology ,Epithelium ,03 medical and health sciences ,Mice ,0302 clinical medicine ,Intestine, Small ,medicine ,Basic Helix-Loop-Helix Transcription Factors ,Animals ,Cell Lineage ,Intestinal Mucosa ,030304 developmental biology ,Mice, Knockout ,0303 health sciences ,Hepatology ,Extramural ,Stem Cells ,Gastroenterology ,Cell Differentiation ,Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress ,Cell biology ,Intestines ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Editorial ,Paneth cell ,Female ,Endoplasmic Reticulum, Rough ,Transcriptome ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cell Division ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Paneth cells are professional secretory cells found within the small intestinal crypt epithelium. Although their role as part of the innate immune complex providing antimicrobial secretory products is well-known, the mechanisms that control secretory capacity are not well-understood. MIST1 is a scaling factor that is thought to control secretory capacity of exocrine cells.Mist1Absence of MIST1 resulted in increased numbers of Paneth cells exhibiting an intermediate cell phenotype but otherwise did not alter overall epithelial cell lineage allocation. Muc2 and lysozyme staining confirmed the presence of intermediate cells at the crypt base of Mist1MIST1 plays an important role in organization of the Paneth cell secretory apparatus and managing endoplasmic reticulum stress. This role occurs downstream of Paneth cell lineage allocation.
- Published
- 2019