Col6a1 + /CD201 + mesenchymal cells regulate intestinal morphogenesis and homeostasis.
Maria-Theodora MelissariAna HenriquesChristos TzaferisAlejandro PradosMichalis E SarrisNiki ChalkidiDimitra MavroeidiPanagiotis ChouvardasSofia GrammenoudiGeorge KolliasVasiliki KoliarakiPublished in: Cellular and molecular life sciences : CMLS (2021)
Intestinal mesenchymal cells encompass multiple subsets, whose origins, functions, and pathophysiological importance are still not clear. Here, we used the Col6a1 Cre mouse, which targets distinct fibroblast subsets and perivascular cells that can be further distinguished by the combination of the CD201, PDGFRα and αSMA markers. Developmental studies revealed that the Col6a1 Cre mouse also targets mesenchymal aggregates that are crucial for intestinal morphogenesis and patterning, suggesting an ontogenic relationship between them and homeostatic PDGFRα hi telocytes. Cell depletion experiments in adulthood showed that Col6a1 + /CD201 + mesenchymal cells regulate homeostatic enteroendocrine cell differentiation and epithelial proliferation. During acute colitis, they expressed an inflammatory and extracellular matrix remodelling gene signature, but they also retained their properties and topology. Notably, both in homeostasis and tissue regeneration, they were dispensable for normal organ architecture, while CD34 + mesenchymal cells expanded, localised at the top of the crypts, and showed increased expression of villous-associated morphogenetic factors, providing thus evidence for the plasticity potential of intestinal mesenchymal cells. Our results provide a comprehensive analysis of the identities, origin, and functional significance of distinct mesenchymal populations in the intestine.