Role of Mesenchymal-Epithelial Interactions in Normal Bladder Development
- 1 November 1996
- journal article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Journal of Urology
- Vol. 156 (5) , 1820-1827
- https://doi.org/10.1016/s0022-5347(01)65545-9
Abstract
To assess the role of cell-cell interactions in the development of bladder smooth muscle. Bladders from 14-day rat fetuses (prior to smooth muscle differentiation) were isolated and digested with trypsin to separate the mesenchyme and epithelium. Three types of specimens were prepared for grafting under the renal capsule of syngeneic adult hosts: a) intact bladder (BL) which had been isolated from fetuses of timed pregnant rats by surgical methods alone; b) bladder mesenchyme (BLM) alone (urothelium removed following trypsinization); and c) isolated BLM recombined with bladder urothelium (BLM+BLE). After 2 weeks of in vivo growth the grafts were assessed by immunocytochemical techniques for the expression of smooth muscle cells markers (actin, myosin, vinculin, laminin and desmin). The same experiments were repeated in vitro. In the final experiment, the induction of bladder smooth muscle was elicited in situ across species lines. Fourteen-day rat BLM was grafted onto the proximal ureter of an athymic nude mouse after ipsilateral nephrectomy. Grafts of intact BL and BLM+BLE recombinants expressed smooth muscle differentiation. In contrast, grafts of BLM alone remained devoid of smooth. This was also true for the in vitro studies in which, after 5 days of growth, BLM + BLE recombinants (n = 12) showed clear evidence of smooth muscle differentiation. In contrast, cultures of BLM alone (n = 12) exhibited poor growth without smooth muscle differentiation. In the final experiment testing the induction of smooth muscle across species, after 1 month in vivo growth the urothelium of the cut end of the ureter had invaded the grafted BLM. The BLM grafts (n = 3) had increased 30 times in size, and immunocytochemical staining showed clear expression of smooth muscle markers in the grafted BLM in proximity to the urothelium. We have shown that the differentiation of smooth muscle in the rat bladder is dependent upon an inductive interaction with the epithelium.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Ontogeny of the Rat Bladder: Smooth Muscle and Epithelial DifferentiationCells Tissues Organs, 1996
- A comprehensive analysis of the developmental and tissue-specific expression of the isoactin multigene family in the ratDevelopmental Biology, 1991
- Smooth muscle actin expression during rat gut development and induction in fetal skin fibroblastic cells associated with intestinal embryonic epitheliumDifferentiation, 1990
- Histologic, morphometric, and immunocytochemical analysis of myometrial development in rats and mice: I. Normal developmentJournal of Anatomy, 1989
- Role of Uterine Epithelium in the Development of Myometrial Smooth Muscle Cells1Biology of Reproduction, 1989
- Mesenchyme-Dependent Differentiation of Epithelial Progenitor Cells in the GutJournal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition, 1987
- Fetal gut mesenchyme induces differentiation of cultured intestinal endodermal and crypt cellsDevelopmental Biology, 1986
- Keratin Antigens in Differentiating SkinAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1985
- Characterization of Androgen Binding and Deoxyribonucleic Acid Synthesis in Prostate-Like Structures Induced in the Urothelium of Testicular Feminized (Tfm/Y) Mice 1Biology of Reproduction, 1984
- Monoclonal antibodies provide specific intramolecular markers for the study of epithelial tonofilament organization.The Journal of cell biology, 1982