Wnt signalling in gastrointestinal epithelial stem cells
Access Status
Open access
Authors
Flanagan, D.
Austin, C.
Vincan, Elizabeth
Phesse, T.
Date
2018Type
Journal Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Flanagan, D. and Austin, C. and Vincan, E. and Phesse, T. 2018. Wnt signalling in gastrointestinal epithelial stem cells. Genes. 9 (4): Articel ID 178.
Source Title
Genes
ISSN
School
School of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences
Collection
Abstract
Wnt signalling regulates several cellular functions including proliferation, differentiation, apoptosis and migration, and is critical for embryonic development. Stem cells are defined by their ability for self-renewal and the ability to be able to give rise to differentiated progeny. Consequently, they are essential for the homeostasis of many organs including the gastrointestinal tract. This review will describe the huge advances in our understanding of how stem cell functions in the gastrointestinal tract are regulated by Wnt signalling, including how deregulated Wnt signalling can hijack these functions to transform cells and lead to cancer.
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Schaefer, Rainer (2008)At present, most cancers are treated with surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy, used alone or in combination. Surgery and radiotherapy are the primary treatment modalities after early detection of cancers and they ...
-
Tanaskovic, S.; Fernandez, S.; Price, Patricia; French, M. (2014)Objective: To examine the relationship of defects in interleukin (IL)-7-induced naive CD4+ T-cell homeostasis with residual immune activation and CD4+ T-cell senescence in HIV patients receiving antiretroviral therapy ...
-
Shaqireen Kwajah, M.; Mustafa, N.; Holme, A.; Pervaiz, Shazib; Schwarz, H. (2011)CD137L (4-1BBL) is a member of the TNFSF and is expressed on APCs as a transmembrane protein. Reverse signaling by CD137L in monocytes causes cell activation and differentiation to mature inflammatory DCs that can stimulate ...