Investigator
Project Manager and Application Specialist · University of Würzburg, Core Unit Systems Medicine
Opposing Wnt signals regulate cervical squamocolumnar homeostasis and emergence of metaplasia
Abstract The transition zones of the squamous and columnar epithelia constitute hotspots for the emergence of cancer, often preceded by metaplasia, in which one epithelial type is replaced by another. It remains unclear how the epithelial spatial organization is maintained and how the transition zone niche is remodelled during metaplasia. Here we used single-cell RNA sequencing to characterize epithelial subpopulations and the underlying stromal compartment of endo- and ectocervix, encompassing the transition zone. Mouse lineage tracing, organoid culture and single-molecule RNA in situ hybridizations revealed that the two epithelia derive from separate cervix-resident lineage-specific stem cell populations regulated by opposing Wnt signals from the stroma. Using a mouse model of cervical metaplasia, we further show that the endocervical stroma undergoes remodelling and increases expression of the Wnt inhibitor Dickkopf-2 (DKK2), promoting the outgrowth of ectocervical stem cells. Our data indicate that homeostasis at the transition zone results from divergent stromal signals, driving the differential proliferation of resident epithelial lineages.
Project Manager and Application Specialist
University of Würzburg · Core Unit Systems Medicine
Research Assistant
University of Würzburg · Institute for Molecular Infection Biology (IMIB)
Postdoctoral Research Associate
Foundation for Research and Technology Hellas (FORTH) · Institute of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology (IMBB)
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
University of Crete · Molecular Biology-Biomedicine
Master of Science (MSc)
Bachelor (BSc)
University of Crete · Biology
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