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Publication : Tubular cell loss in early inv/nphp2 mutant kidneys represents a possible homeostatic mechanism in cortical tubular formation.

First Author  Shigeta M Year  2018
Journal  PLoS One Volume  13
Issue  6 Pages  e0198580
PubMed ID  29889867 Mgi Jnum  J:262851
Mgi Id  MGI:6162324 Doi  10.1371/journal.pone.0198580
Citation  Shigeta M, et al. (2018) Tubular cell loss in early inv/nphp2 mutant kidneys represents a possible homeostatic mechanism in cortical tubular formation. PLoS One 13(6):e0198580
abstractText  Inversion of embryonic turning (inv) cystic mice develop multiple renal cysts and are a model for type II nephronophthisis (NPHP2). The defect of planar cell polarity (PCP) by oriented cell division was proposed as the underlying cellular phenotype, while abnormal cell proliferation and apoptosis occur in some polycystic kidney disease models. However, how these cystogenic phenotypes are linked and what is most critical for cystogenesis remain largely unknown. In particular, in early cortical cytogenesis in the inv mutant cystic model, it remains uncertain whether the increased proliferation index results from changes in cell cycle length or cell fate determination. To address tubular cell kinetics, doubling time and total number of tubular cells, as well as amount of genomic DNA (gDNA), were measured in mutant and normal control kidneys. Despite a significantly higher bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU)-proliferation index in the mutant, total tubular cell number and doubling time were unaffected. Unexpectedly, the mutant had tubular cell loss, characterized by a temporal decrease in tubular cells incorporating 5-ethynyl-2 -deoxyuridine (EdU) and significantly increased nuclear debris. Based on current data we established a new multi-population shift model in postnatal renal development, indicating that a few restricted tubular cell populations contribute to cortical tubular formation. As in the inv mutant phenotype, the model simulation revealed a large population of tubular cells with rapid cell cycling and tubular cell loss. The proposed cellular kinetics suggest not only the underlying mechanism of the inv mutant phenotype but also a possible renal homeostatic mechanism for tubule formation.
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