p63-expressing cells are the stem cells of developing prostate, bladder, and colorectal epithelia
- PMID: 23620512
- PMCID: PMC3657776
- DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1221216110
p63-expressing cells are the stem cells of developing prostate, bladder, and colorectal epithelia
Abstract
The tumor protein p63 (p63), and more specifically the NH2-terminal truncated (ΔN) p63 isoform, is a marker of basal epithelial cells and is required for normal development of several epithelial tissues, including the bladder and prostate glands. Although p63-expressing cells are proposed to be the stem cells of the developing prostate epithelium and bladder urothelium, cell lineages in these endoderm-derived epithelia remain highly controversial, and rigorous lineage tracing studies are warranted. Here, we generated knock-in mice expressing Cre recombinase (Cre) under the control of the endogenous ΔNp63 promoter. Heterozygote ΔNp63(+/Cre) mice were phenotypically normal and fertile. Cre-mediated recombination in ΔNp63(+/Cre);ROSA26(EYFP) reporter mice faithfully recapitulated the pattern of ΔNp63 expression and were useful for genetic lineage tracing of ΔNp63-expressing cells of the caudal endoderm in vivo. We found that ΔNp63-positive cells of the urogenital sinus generated all epithelial lineages of the prostate and bladder, indicating that these cells represent the stem/progenitor cells of those epithelia during development VSports手机版. We also observed ΔNp63 expression in caudal gut endoderm and the contribution of ΔNp63-positive cells to the stem/progenitor compartment of adult colorectal epithelium. Because p63 is a master regulator of stratified epithelial development, this finding provides a unique developmental insight into the cell of origin of squamous cell metaplasia and squamous cell carcinoma of the colon. .
Keywords: genitourinary tract; hindgut; large intestine V体育安卓版. .
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The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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- Marker PC, Donjacour AA, Dahiya R, Cunha GR. Hormonal, cellular, and molecular control of prostatic development. Dev Biol. 2003;253(2):165–174. - PubMed (VSports手机版)
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- Goto K, et al. Proximal prostatic stem cells are programmed to regenerate a proximal-distal ductal axis. Stem Cells. 2006;24(8):1859–1868. - PubMed
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