A52 THE LGR5 ACTIVITY MODULATES CELL METABOLISM TO FAVOR WOUND HEALING
J A Acosta Montalvo, G Arguin, S Dagenais Bellefeuille, F Gendron

TL;DR
This study shows that LGR5, a stem cell marker, modulates cell metabolism to enhance wound healing and cell migration.
Contribution
The paper identifies LGR5 as a receptor that modulates cell metabolism through its interactome, linking it to wound healing and cell migration.
Findings
LGR5 expression increases oxygen consumption and glycolysis in cells.
LGR5 is associated with metabolic pathways like glutamate and purine metabolism.
LGR5 promotes wound healing and single-cell migration.
Abstract
The stem cell marker leucine-rich G-protein-coupled receptor-5 (LGR5) acts as an R-spondin (RSPO) signal transducer, facilitating WNT signaling to support tissue development and renewal. In GI diseases, LGR5+intestinal stem cells play a critical role in wound healing, while its expression by cancer stem cells correlates with cancer progression and chemoresistance. Surprisingly, only a handful of studies have investigated the functional role of LGR5 as a receptor. Demonstrating LGR5 receptor function and identifying signaling determinants will be a significant breakthrough in understanding stem cell biology under normal and pathological conditions. The project hypothesis is that LGR5 scaffolds the assembly of signaling complexes that modulate cell metabolism to accommodate cell fate, growth, and migration. The project aims to characterize the molecular determinants linking LGR5 to cell…
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Taxonomy
TopicsWound Healing and Treatments
