Mechanisms of stem cell population dynamics and reprogramming

Akronyymi

STEMpop

Rahoitetun hankkeen kuvaus

How complex but stereotyped tissues are formed, maintained and regenerated through local growth, differentiation and remodeling is a fundamental open question in biology. Understanding how single cell behaviors are coordinated on the population level and how population-level dynamics is coupled to tissue architecture is required to resolve this question as well as to develop stem cell (SC) therapies and effective treatments against cancers. As a self-renewing organ maintained by multiple distinct SC populations, the epidermis represents an outstanding, clinically highly relevant research paradigm to address this question. A key epidermal SC population are the hair follicle stem cells (HFSCs) that fuel hair follicle regeneration, repair epidermal injuries and, when deregulated, initiate carcinogenesis. The major obstacle in mechanistic understanding of HFSC regulation has been the lack of an in vitro culture system enabling their precise monitoring and manipulation. We have overcome this barrier by developing a method for long-term maintenance of multipotent HFSCs that recapitulates the complexity of HFSC fate decisions and dynamic crosstalk between HFSCs and their progeny. This breakthrough invention puts me in the unique position to investigate how HFSCs self-organize into a network of SCs and progenitors through population-level signaling crosstalk and phenotypic plasticity. This project will uncover the spatiotemporal dynamics of HFSCs fate decisions and establish the role of the niche in this process (Aim1), decipher key gene-regulatory networks and epigenetic barriers that control phenotypic plasticity (Aim2), and discover druggable signaling networks that drive bi-directional reprogramming of HFSCs and their progeny (Aim3). By deconstructing complex tissue-level behaviors at an unprecedented spatiotemporal resolution this study has the potential to transform the fundaments of adult SC biology with immediate implications to regenerative medicine.
Näytä enemmän

Aloitusvuosi

2018

Päättymisvuosi

2023

Myönnetty rahoitus

Sara WICKSTRÖM
1 999 918 €
Coordinator

Rahoittaja

Euroopan unioni

Rahoitusmuoto

ERC Consolidator Grant

Puiteohjelma

Horizon 2020 Framework Programme

Haku

Ohjelman osa
EXCELLENT SCIENCE - European Research Council (ERC) (5215)
Aihe
ERC Consolidator Grant (ERC-2017-COG)
Haun tunniste
ERC-2017-COG

Muut tiedot

Rahoituspäätöksen numero

770877

Tunnistetut aiheet

cancer