The sld mutation is specific for sublingual salivary mucous cells and disrupts apomucin gene expression

Author:

Fallon M. A.1,Latchney L. R.1,Hand A. R.2,Johar A.3,Denny P. A.4,Georgel P. T.1,Denny P. C.4,Culp D. J.1

Affiliation:

1. University of Rochester Medical Center, Center for Oral Biology and the Department of Pharmacology and Physiology, Rochester, New York 14642

2. Departments of Pediatric Dentistry

3. BioStructure and Function, University of Connecticut Health Center, School of Dental Medicine, Farmington, Connecticut 06030

4. University of Southern California, Division of Diagnostic Sciences, School of Dentistry, Los Angeles, California 90089

Abstract

NFS/N- sld mice harbor a spontaneous autosomal recessive mutation, sld (sublingual gland differentiation arrest) and histologically display attenuated mucous cell expression in sublingual glands (Hayashi et al. Am J Pathol 132: 187–191, 1988). Because altered serous demilune cell expression is unknown, we determined the phenotypic expression of this cell type in mutants. Moreover, we evaluated whether absence of glycoconjugate staining in 3-day-old mutant glands is related to disruption in apomucin gene expression and/or to posttranslational glycosylation events. Serous cell differentiation is unaffected, determined morphologically and by serous cell marker expression (PSP, parotid secretory protein; and Dcpp, demilune cell and parotid protein). Conversely, apical granules in “atypical” exocrine cells of mutant glands are PSP and mucin negative, but contain abundant SMGD (mucous granule marker). Age-related appearance of mucous cells is associated with expression of apomucin gene products, whereas SMGD expression is unaltered. “Atypical” cells thus appear specified to a mucous cell fate but do not synthesize mucin glycoproteins unless selectively induced postnatally, indicating the sld mutation disrupts apomucin transcriptional regulation and/or decreases apomucin mRNA stability.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Genetics,Physiology

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