Mesenchymal-epithelial interactions in bladder smooth muscle development: epithelial specificity. 1998

M J DiSandro, and Y Li, and L S Baskin, and S Hayward, and G Cunha
Department of Urology, University of California, San Francisco 94143, USA.

OBJECTIVE We previously showed that mesenchymal-epithelial interactions are necessary for the development of bladder smooth muscle. Specifically without bladder epithelium embryonic bladder mesenchyme does not differentiate into smooth muscle. We determine whether this process is specific to bladder epithelium or whether epithelial cells from other organ systems induce bladder mesenchyme to differentiate into smooth muscle, as well as whether epithelial age is an important variable. METHODS We recombined 14-day bladder mesenchyme before smooth muscle differentiation with rat epithelium from 14-day, 19-day, newborn and adult bladder, ureter, colon, ileum, stomach, cornea and epidermis. In addition, bladder epithelium was recombined with 14-day embryonic small intestinal, 14-day embryonic gastric and newborn seminal vesicle mesenchyme. All tissue recombinants were grafted under the renal capsule of an adult rat syngeneic host for 3 weeks. RESULTS Immunohistochemical analysis with antibodies directed against smooth muscle alpha-actin revealed that all epithelial types studied induced bladder mesenchyme to differentiate into smooth muscle, although to different degrees. Induction of smooth muscle was independent of urothelial age. In addition, bladder epithelium induced intestinal, gastric and seminal vesicle mesenchyme to differentiate into smooth muscle and express an overall morphological pattern indicative of the bladder fibromuscular wall. CONCLUSIONS The mechanism whereby urothelium induces bladder mesenchyme to differentiate into smooth muscle is not specific to embryonic urothelium. Older urothelium and heterotypic epithelium also induce smooth muscle differentiation. With the common use of bowel, stomach and ureteral segments for bladder augmentation it is important to understand the interaction of different types of epithelium with the native bladder.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D008648 Mesoderm The middle germ layer of an embryo derived from three paired mesenchymal aggregates along the neural tube. Mesenchyme,Dorsal Mesoderm,Intermediate Mesoderm,Lateral Plate Mesoderm,Mesenchyma,Paraxial Mesoderm,Dorsal Mesoderms,Intermediate Mesoderms,Lateral Plate Mesoderms,Mesenchymas,Mesoderm, Dorsal,Mesoderm, Intermediate,Mesoderm, Lateral Plate,Mesoderm, Paraxial,Mesoderms, Dorsal,Mesoderms, Intermediate,Mesoderms, Lateral Plate,Mesoderms, Paraxial,Paraxial Mesoderms,Plate Mesoderm, Lateral,Plate Mesoderms, Lateral
D011916 Rats, Inbred F344 An inbred strain of rat that is used for general BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH purposes. Fischer Rats,Rats, Inbred CDF,Rats, Inbred Fischer 344,Rats, F344,Rats, Inbred Fisher 344,CDF Rat, Inbred,CDF Rats, Inbred,F344 Rat,F344 Rat, Inbred,F344 Rats,F344 Rats, Inbred,Inbred CDF Rat,Inbred CDF Rats,Inbred F344 Rat,Inbred F344 Rats,Rat, F344,Rat, Inbred CDF,Rat, Inbred F344,Rats, Fischer
D001743 Urinary Bladder A musculomembranous sac along the URINARY TRACT. URINE flows from the KIDNEYS into the bladder via the ureters (URETER), and is held there until URINATION. Bladder,Bladder Detrusor Muscle,Detrusor Urinae,Bladder Detrusor Muscles,Bladder, Urinary,Detrusor Muscle, Bladder,Detrusor Muscles, Bladder
D000818 Animals Unicellular or multicellular, heterotrophic organisms, that have sensation and the power of voluntary movement. Under the older five kingdom paradigm, Animalia was one of the kingdoms. Under the modern three domain model, Animalia represents one of the many groups in the domain EUKARYOTA. Animal,Metazoa,Animalia
D051381 Rats The common name for the genus Rattus. Rattus,Rats, Laboratory,Rats, Norway,Rattus norvegicus,Laboratory Rat,Laboratory Rats,Norway Rat,Norway Rats,Rat,Rat, Laboratory,Rat, Norway,norvegicus, Rattus
D019459 Urothelium The epithelial lining of the URINARY TRACT. Urinary Tract Epithelium,Epithelium, Urinary Tract

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