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Cytokeratin 15 Marks Basal Epithelia in Developing Ureters and Is Upregulated in a Subset of Urothelial Cell Carcinomas

The mammalian ureter contains a water-tight epithelium surrounded by smooth muscle. Key molecules have been defined which regulate ureteric bud initiation and drive the differentiation of ureteric mesenchyme into peristaltic smooth muscle. Less is known about mechanisms underlying the developmental...

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Autores principales: Tai, Guangping, Ranjzad, Parisa, Marriage, Fiona, Rehman, Samrina, Denley, Helen, Dixon, Jill, Mitchell, Karen, Day, Philip J. R., Woolf, Adrian S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3832456/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24260555
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0081167
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author Tai, Guangping
Ranjzad, Parisa
Marriage, Fiona
Rehman, Samrina
Denley, Helen
Dixon, Jill
Mitchell, Karen
Day, Philip J. R.
Woolf, Adrian S.
author_facet Tai, Guangping
Ranjzad, Parisa
Marriage, Fiona
Rehman, Samrina
Denley, Helen
Dixon, Jill
Mitchell, Karen
Day, Philip J. R.
Woolf, Adrian S.
author_sort Tai, Guangping
collection PubMed
description The mammalian ureter contains a water-tight epithelium surrounded by smooth muscle. Key molecules have been defined which regulate ureteric bud initiation and drive the differentiation of ureteric mesenchyme into peristaltic smooth muscle. Less is known about mechanisms underlying the developmental patterning of the multilayered epithelium characterising the mature ureter. In skin, which also contains a multilayered epithelium, cytokeratin 15 (CK15), an acidic intermediate filament protein, marks cells whose progeny contribute to epidermal regeneration following wounding. Moreover, CK15+ precursor cells in skin can give rise to basal cell carcinomas. In the current study, using transcriptome microarrays of embryonic wild type mouse ureters, Krt15, coding for CK15, was detected. Quantitative polymerase chain reaction analyses confirmed the initial finding and demonstrated that Krt15 levels increased during the fetal period when the ureteric epithelium becomes multilayered. CK15 protein was undetectable in the ureteric bud, the rudiment from which the ureter grows. Nevertheless, later in fetal development, CK15 was immunodetected in a subset of basal urothelial cells in the ureteric stalk. Superficial epithelial cells, including those positive for the differentiation marker uroplakin III, were CK15-. Transformation-related protein 63 (P63) has been implicated in epithelial differentiation in murine fetal urinary bladders. In wild type fetal ureters, CK15+ cells were positive for P63, and p63 homozygous null mutant ureters lacked CK15+ cells. In these mutant ureters, sections of the urothelium were monolayered versus the uniform multilayering found in wild type littermates. Human urothelial cell carcinomas account for considerable morbidity and mortality. CK15 was upregulated in a subset of invasive ureteric and urinary bladder cancers. Thus, in ureter development, the absence of CK15 is associated with a structurally simplified urothelium whereas, postnatally, increased CK15 levels feature in malignant urothelial overgrowth. CK15 may be a novel marker for urinary tract epithelial precursor cells.
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spelling pubmed-38324562013-11-20 Cytokeratin 15 Marks Basal Epithelia in Developing Ureters and Is Upregulated in a Subset of Urothelial Cell Carcinomas Tai, Guangping Ranjzad, Parisa Marriage, Fiona Rehman, Samrina Denley, Helen Dixon, Jill Mitchell, Karen Day, Philip J. R. Woolf, Adrian S. PLoS One Research Article The mammalian ureter contains a water-tight epithelium surrounded by smooth muscle. Key molecules have been defined which regulate ureteric bud initiation and drive the differentiation of ureteric mesenchyme into peristaltic smooth muscle. Less is known about mechanisms underlying the developmental patterning of the multilayered epithelium characterising the mature ureter. In skin, which also contains a multilayered epithelium, cytokeratin 15 (CK15), an acidic intermediate filament protein, marks cells whose progeny contribute to epidermal regeneration following wounding. Moreover, CK15+ precursor cells in skin can give rise to basal cell carcinomas. In the current study, using transcriptome microarrays of embryonic wild type mouse ureters, Krt15, coding for CK15, was detected. Quantitative polymerase chain reaction analyses confirmed the initial finding and demonstrated that Krt15 levels increased during the fetal period when the ureteric epithelium becomes multilayered. CK15 protein was undetectable in the ureteric bud, the rudiment from which the ureter grows. Nevertheless, later in fetal development, CK15 was immunodetected in a subset of basal urothelial cells in the ureteric stalk. Superficial epithelial cells, including those positive for the differentiation marker uroplakin III, were CK15-. Transformation-related protein 63 (P63) has been implicated in epithelial differentiation in murine fetal urinary bladders. In wild type fetal ureters, CK15+ cells were positive for P63, and p63 homozygous null mutant ureters lacked CK15+ cells. In these mutant ureters, sections of the urothelium were monolayered versus the uniform multilayering found in wild type littermates. Human urothelial cell carcinomas account for considerable morbidity and mortality. CK15 was upregulated in a subset of invasive ureteric and urinary bladder cancers. Thus, in ureter development, the absence of CK15 is associated with a structurally simplified urothelium whereas, postnatally, increased CK15 levels feature in malignant urothelial overgrowth. CK15 may be a novel marker for urinary tract epithelial precursor cells. Public Library of Science 2013-11-18 /pmc/articles/PMC3832456/ /pubmed/24260555 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0081167 Text en © 2013 Tai et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Tai, Guangping
Ranjzad, Parisa
Marriage, Fiona
Rehman, Samrina
Denley, Helen
Dixon, Jill
Mitchell, Karen
Day, Philip J. R.
Woolf, Adrian S.
Cytokeratin 15 Marks Basal Epithelia in Developing Ureters and Is Upregulated in a Subset of Urothelial Cell Carcinomas
title Cytokeratin 15 Marks Basal Epithelia in Developing Ureters and Is Upregulated in a Subset of Urothelial Cell Carcinomas
title_full Cytokeratin 15 Marks Basal Epithelia in Developing Ureters and Is Upregulated in a Subset of Urothelial Cell Carcinomas
title_fullStr Cytokeratin 15 Marks Basal Epithelia in Developing Ureters and Is Upregulated in a Subset of Urothelial Cell Carcinomas
title_full_unstemmed Cytokeratin 15 Marks Basal Epithelia in Developing Ureters and Is Upregulated in a Subset of Urothelial Cell Carcinomas
title_short Cytokeratin 15 Marks Basal Epithelia in Developing Ureters and Is Upregulated in a Subset of Urothelial Cell Carcinomas
title_sort cytokeratin 15 marks basal epithelia in developing ureters and is upregulated in a subset of urothelial cell carcinomas
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3832456/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24260555
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0081167
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