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Phospholipid Remodeling and Cholesterol Availability Regulate Intestinal Stemness and Tumorigenesis.

Citation
Wang, B., et al. “Phospholipid Remodeling And Cholesterol Availability Regulate Intestinal Stemness And Tumorigenesis.”. Cell Stem Cell, pp. 206-220.e4.
Center UCSD-UCLA
Author Bo Wang, Xin Rong, Elisa N D Palladino, Jiafang Wang, Alan M Fogelman, Martín G Martín, Waddah A Alrefai, David A Ford, Peter Tontonoz
Keywords cholesterol, intestinal stem cell, Phospholipid
Abstract

Adequate availability of cellular building blocks, including lipids, is a prerequisite for cellular proliferation, but excess dietary lipids are linked to increased cancer risk. Despite these connections, specific regulatory relationships between membrane composition, intestinal stem cell (ISC) proliferation, and tumorigenesis are unclear. We reveal an unexpected link between membrane phospholipid remodeling and cholesterol biosynthesis and demonstrate that cholesterol itself acts as a mitogen for ISCs. Inhibition of the phospholipid-remodeling enzyme Lpcat3 increases membrane saturation and stimulates cholesterol biosynthesis, thereby driving ISC proliferation. Pharmacologic inhibition of cholesterol synthesis normalizes crypt hyperproliferation in Lpcat3-deficient organoids and mice. Conversely, increasing cellular cholesterol content stimulates crypt organoid growth, and providing excess dietary cholesterol or driving endogenous cholesterol synthesis through SREBP-2 expression promotes ISC proliferation in vivo. Finally, disruption of Lpcat3-dependent phospholipid and cholesterol homeostasis dramatically enhances tumor formation in Apc mice. These findings identify a critical dietary-responsive phospholipid-cholesterol axis regulating ISC proliferation and tumorigenesis.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Cell stem cell
Volume
22
Issue
2
Number of Pages
206-220.e4
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1875-9777
DOI
10.1016/j.stem.2017.12.017
Alternate Journal
Cell Stem Cell
PMID
29395055
PMCID
PMC5807072
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