| Literature DB >> 23993789 |
Devangini Gandhi1, Andrei Molotkov1, Ekatherina Batourina1, Kerry Schneider1, Hanbin Dan1, Maia Reiley1, Ed Laufer2, Daniel Metzger3, Fengxia Liang4, Yi Liao4, Tung-Tien Sun4, Bruce Aronow5, Roni Rosen1, Josh Mauney6, Rosalyn Adam4, Carolina Rosselot1, Jason Van Batavia1, Andrew McMahon7, Jill McMahon7, Jin-Jin Guo7, Cathy Mendelsohn1.
Abstract
The urothelium is a multilayered epithelium that serves as a barrier between the urinary tract and blood, preventing the exchange of water and toxic substances. It consists of superficial cells specialized for synthesis and transport of uroplakins that assemble into a tough apical plaque, one or more layers of intermediate cells, and keratin 5-expressing basal cells (K5-BCs), which are considered to be progenitors in the urothelium and other specialized epithelia. Fate mapping, however, reveals that intermediate cells rather than K5-BCs are progenitors in the adult regenerating urothelium, that P cells, a transient population, are progenitors in the embryo, and that retinoids are critical in P cells and intermediate cells, respectively, for their specification during development and regeneration. These observations have important implications for tissue engineering and repair and, ultimately, may lead to treatments that prevent loss of the urothelial barrier, a major cause of voiding dysfunction and bladder pain syndrome.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23993789 PMCID: PMC4024836 DOI: 10.1016/j.devcel.2013.07.017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dev Cell ISSN: 1534-5807 Impact factor: 12.270