Login / Signup

Functional Genomic Screening During Somatic Cell Reprogramming Identifies DKK3 as a Roadblock of Organ Regeneration.

Frank ArnoldPallavi U MahaddalkarJohann M KrausXiaowei ZhongWendy BergmannDharini SrinivasanJohann GoutElodie RogerAlica K BeutelEugen ZizerUmesh TharehalliNora DaissRonan RussellLukas PerkhoferRupert OellingerQiong LinNinel AzoiteiFrank-Ulrich WeissMarkus M LerchStefan LiebauSarah-Fee KatzAndré LechelRoland RadThomas SeufferleinHans A KestlerMichael OttAmar Deep SharmaPatrick C HermannAlexander Kleger
Published in: Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) (2021)
Somatic cell reprogramming and tissue repair share relevant factors and molecular programs. Here, Dickkopf-3 (DKK3) is identified as novel factor for organ regeneration using combined transcription-factor-induced reprogramming and RNA-interference techniques. Loss of Dkk3 enhances the generation of induced pluripotent stem cells but does not affect de novo derivation of embryonic stem cells, three-germ-layer differentiation or colony formation capacity of liver and pancreatic organoids. However, DKK3 expression levels in wildtype animals and serum levels in human patients are elevated upon injury. Accordingly, Dkk3-null mice display less liver damage upon acute and chronic failure mediated by increased proliferation in hepatocytes and LGR5+ liver progenitor cell population, respectively. Similarly, recovery from experimental pancreatitis is accelerated. Regeneration onset occurs in the acinar compartment accompanied by virtually abolished canonical-Wnt-signaling in Dkk3-null animals. This results in reduced expression of the Hedgehog repressor Gli3 and increased Hedgehog-signaling activity upon Dkk3 loss. Collectively, these data reveal Dkk3 as a key regulator of organ regeneration via a direct, previously unacknowledged link between DKK3, canonical-Wnt-, and Hedgehog-signaling.
Keyphrases