| Literature DB >> 27053245 |
Sawa Onouchi1, Osamu Ichii1, Teppei Nakamura1,2, Yaser Hosny Ali Elewa1,3, Yasuhiro Kon4.
Abstract
Although gut flexures characterize gut morphology, the mechanisms underlying flexure formation remain obscure. Previously, we analyzed the mouse duodenojejunal flexure (DJF) as a model for its formation and reported asymmetric morphologies between the inner and outer bending sides of the fetal mouse DJF, implying their contribution to DJF formation. We now present the extracellular matrix (ECM) as an important factor for gut morphogenesis. We investigate ECM distribution during mouse DJF formation by histological techniques. In the intercellular space of the gut wall, high Alcian-Blue positivity for proteoglycans shifted from the outer to the inner side of the gut wall during DJF formation. Immunopositivity for fibronectin, collagen I, or pan-tenascin was higher at the inner than at the outer side. Collagen IV and laminins localized to the epithelial basement membrane. Beneath the mesothelium at the pre-formation stage, collagen IV and laminin immunopositivity showed inverse results, corresponding to the different cellular characteristics at this site. At the post-formation stage, however, laminin positivity beneath the mesothelium was the reverse of that observed during the pre-formation stage. High immunopositivity for collagen IV and laminins at the inner gut wall mesenchyme of the post-formation DJF implied a different blood vessel distribution. We conclude that ECM distribution changes spatiotemporally during mouse DJF formation, indicating ECM association with the establishment of asymmetric morphologies during this process.Entities:
Keywords: Duodenojejunal flexure; Extracellular matrix; Flexure formation; Gut morphogenesis; Mouse
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27053245 DOI: 10.1007/s00441-016-2390-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Tissue Res ISSN: 0302-766X Impact factor: 5.249