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Learn MoreThe adult intestinal epithelium is maintained by a continuous replacement of differentiated cells from stem cells. Previous studies suggest that cellular metabolic pathways regulate intestinal stem cell activity and differentiation. However, little is known about the cell-intrinsic factors that control these metabolic programs. Here, we identify the transcription factor PRDM16 as a critical regulator of intestinal metabolic programing and stem cell differentiation. Acute deletion ofPrdm16in adult mice causes severe intestinal wasting, apoptosis, and an accumulation of poorly differentiated cells in the crypt. Prdm16-deficient crypts display decreased expression levels of fatty acid oxidation (FAO) genes and reduced rates of FAO. PRDM16 binds, along with its protein partners PPAR and PPAR, to the promoter and enhancer regions of many FAO genes. The loss ofPrdm16or inhibition of FAO impaired the transition of intestinal stem cells into transit amplifying cells. Notably, PRDM16 expression is highest in the duodenum and declines distally along the intestine. This gradient of PRDM16 expression controls the region-specific expression of the FAO program and underlies the differential reliance of region-specific stem cells on FAO. Altogether, this study establishes PRDM16 as a regional-specific regulator of metabolism and stem cell differentiation in the intestine. SOURCE: Patrick Seale University of Pennsylvania
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