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p53 terminates the regenerative fetal-like state after colitis-associated injury

Authors

  • K. Hartl
  • Ş. Bayram
  • A. Wetzel
  • C. Harnack
  • M. Lin
  • A.S. Fischer
  • L. Liu
  • G. Beccacec
  • G. Mastrobuoni
  • S. Geisberger
  • M. Forbes
  • B.J.E. Monteiro
  • M. Macino
  • R.E. Flores
  • C. Engelmann
  • H.J. Mollenkopf
  • M. Schupp
  • F. Tacke
  • A.D. Sanders
  • S. Kempa
  • H. Berger
  • M. Sigal

Journal

  • Science Advances

Citation

  • Sci Adv 10 (43): eadp8783

Abstract

  • Cells that lack p53 signaling frequently occur in ulcerative colitis (UC) and are considered early drivers in UC-associated colorectal cancer (CRC). Epithelial injury during colitis is associated with transient stem cell reprogramming from the adult, homeostatic to a “fetal-like” regenerative state. Here, we use murine and organoid-based models to study the role of Trp53 during epithelial reprogramming. We find that p53 signaling is silent and dispensable during homeostasis but strongly up-regulated in the epithelium upon DSS-induced colitis. While in WT cells this causes termination of the regenerative state, crypts that lack Trp53 remain locked in the highly proliferative, regenerative state long-term. The regenerative state in WT cells requires high Wnt signaling to maintain elevated levels of glycolysis. Instead, Trp53 deficiency enables Wnt-independent glycolysis due to overexpression of rate-limiting enzyme PKM2. Our study reveals the context-dependent relevance of p53 signaling specifically in the injury-induced regenerative state, explaining the high abundance of clones lacking p53 signaling in UC and UC-associated CRC.


DOI

doi:10.1126/sciadv.adp8783