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Publication : Comparative analysis of neutral endopeptidase (NEP) and villin gene expression during mouse embryogenesis and enterocyte maturation.

First Author  Landry C Year  1994
Journal  Differentiation Volume  56
Issue  1-2 Pages  55-65
PubMed ID  8026647 Mgi Jnum  J:17719
Mgi Id  MGI:65749 Doi  10.1046/j.1432-0436.1994.56120055.x
Citation  Landry C, et al. (1994) Comparative analysis of neutral endopeptidase (NEP) and villin gene expression during mouse embryogenesis and enterocyte maturation. Differentiation 56(1-2):55-65
abstractText  Neutral endopeptidase (Endopeptidase 24.11; NEP; neprilysin), an integral membrane protein, and villin, a major microvillar cytoskeletal actin-binding protein, are both typically associated with brush border epithelia. In this study, cRNA probes were hybridized in situ to investigate the expression of NEP and villin genes in embryo and adult mouse enterocytes. During development, villin mRNAs were easily detected in the immature digestive tract well before establishment of the brush border. In 17-day-old embryos, a transient elevation of villin mRNA occurred just prior to a dramatic increase in microvilli length and density. NEP only appeared by day 17 as the embryonic gut began to become functional. It therefore appears that the onset of transcription of specialized cytoskeletal proteins from the brush border preceded that of intrinsic membrane-bound enzyme from microvilli. In the adult intestinal fold, both mRNAs were expressed along the whole length of the villus with maximal expression at its base. In contrast, both proteins were uniformly expressed along the whole crypt-villus axis. Quantitative analysis revealed an asymmetric intracellular distribution of both mRNAs that were differentially polarized in the apical cytoplasm of enterocytes.
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