SPT6 loss Permits the Transdifferentiation of Keratinocytes into an Intestinal Fate that Recapitulates Barrett’s Metaplasia

2021 
Transient depletion of the transcription elongation factor SPT6 in the keratinocyte has been recently shown to inhibit epidermal differentiation and stratification; instead, they transdifferentiate into a gut-like lineage. We show here that this phenomenon of transdifferentiation recapitulates Barretts metaplasia, the only human pathophysiologic condition in which a stratified squamous epithelium that is injured due to chronic acid reflux is trans-committed into an intestinal fate. The evidence we present here not only pinpoint the keratinocyte as the cell of origin of Barretts metaplasia, but also provide mechanistic insights linking chronic acid injury, downregulation of SPT6, loss of epidermal fate and metaplastic progression. Because Barretts metaplasia in the esophagus (BE) is a pre-neoplastic condition with no preclinical human models, these findings have a profound impact on the modeling Barretts metaplasia-in-a-dish.
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