Interferon-responsive intestinal BEST4/CA7+ cells are targets of bacterial diarrheal toxins

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Publication date
DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.stem.2025.02.003
Reference D. Wang, W.K. Spoelstra, L. Lin, N. Akkerman, D. Krueger, T. Dayton, J.S. van Zon, S.J. Tans, J.H. van Es and H. Clevers, Interferon-responsive intestinal BEST4/CA7+ cells are targets of bacterial diarrheal toxins, Cell Stem Cell 32, (4), 598-612.e5 (2025)
Groups Biophysics, Quantitative Developmental Biology

BEST4/CA7+ cells of the human intestine were recently identified by single-cell RNA sequencing. While their gene expression profile predicts a role in electrolyte balance, BEST4/CA7+ cell function has not been explored experimentally owing to the absence of BEST4/CA7+ cells in mice and the paucity of human in vitro models. Here, we establish a protocol that allows the emergence of BEST4/CA7+ cells in human intestinal organoids. Differentiation of BEST4/CA7+ cells requires activation of Notch signaling and the transcription factor SPIB. BEST4/CA7+ cell numbers strongly increase in response to the cytokine interferon-γ, supporting a role in immunity. Indeed, we demonstrate that BEST4/CA7+ cells generate robust CFTR-mediated fluid efflux when stimulated with bacterial diarrhea-causing toxins and find the norepinephrine-ADRA2A axis as a potential mechanism in blocking BEST4/CA7+ cell-mediated fluid secretion. Our observations identify a central role of BEST4/CA7+ cells in fluid homeostasis in response to bacterial infections.