ID2 controls differentiation of enteroendocrine cells in mouse small intestine.
Valeriya V ZininaFrank RuehlePatricia WinklerLisa RebmannHanna LukasStefanie MöckelAndreas DiefenbachMaria Mendez-LagoNatalia SoshnikovaPublished in: Acta physiologica (Oxford, England) (2022)
ID2 plays an important role in cell fate decisions in the adult small intestine. First, ID2 is essential for establishing a differentiation gradient for enterochromaffin and X-cells along the anterior-posterior axis of the gut. Next, ID2 is necessary for the differentiation of N-cells thus ensuring a differentiation gradient along the crypt-villi axis. Finally, ID2 suppresses the commitment of secretory intestinal epithelial progenitors towards tuft cell lineage and thus controls host immune response to commensal and parasitic microbiota.