Author:
Lendvay Thomas S.,Sweet Robert,Han Chang-Hee,Soygur Tarkan,Cheng Jan-Fan,Plaire J. Chadwick,Charleston Jay S.,Charleston Lynne B.,Bagai Shelly,Cochrane Kimberly,Rubio Eric,Bassuk James A.
Abstract
Diseases and conditions affecting the lower urinary tract are a leading cause of dysfunctional sexual health, incontinence, infection, and kidney failure. The growth, differentiation, and repair of the bladder's epithelial lining are regulated, in part, by fibroblast growth factor (FGF)-7 and -10 via a paracrine cascade originating in the mesenchyme (lamina propria) and targeting the receptor for FGF-7 and -10 within the transitional epithelium (urothelium). The FGF-7 gene is located at the 15q15-q21.1 locus on chromosome 15 and four exons generate a 3.852-kb mRNA. Five duplicated FGF-7 gene sequences that localized to chromosome 9 were predicted not to generate functional protein products, thus validating the use of FGF-7-null mice as an experimental model. Recombinant FGF-7 and -10 induced proliferation of human urothelial cells in vitro and transitional epithelium of wild-type and FGF-7-null mice in vivo. To determine the extent that induction of urothelial cell proliferation during the bladder response to injury is dependent on FGF-7, an animal model of partial bladder outlet obstruction was developed. Unbiased stereology was used to measure the percentage of proliferating urothelial cells between obstructed groups of wild-type and FGF-7-null mice. The stereological analysis indicated that a statistical significant difference did not exist between the two groups, suggesting that FGF-7 is not essential for urothelial cell proliferation in response to partial outlet obstruction. In contrast, a significant increase in FGF-10 expression was observed in the obstructed FGF-7-null group, indicating that the compensatory pathway that functions in this model results in urothelial repair.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Reference66 articles.
1. Fibroblast Growth Factor-10 Is a Mitogen for Urothelial Cells
2. Baskin LS, Hayward SW, DiSandro M, Li YW, Cunha GR. Epithelial-mesenchymal interactions in the bladder: implications for bladder augmentation. In: Advances in Bladder Research, edited by Baskin LS and Hayward SW. New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum, 1999, p. 49–62.
3. Baskin LS, Hayward SW, Sutherland RA, DiSandro MJ, Thomson AA, Goodman J, Cunha GR. Mesenchymal-epithelial interactions in the bladder. World J Urol 14: 301–309, 1995.
4. Baskin LS, Sutherland RS, Thomson AA, Hayward SW, Cunha GR. Growth factors and receptors in bladder development and obstruction. Lab Invest 75: 157–166, 1996.
5. Growth Factors in Bladder Wound Healing
Cited by
6 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献