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Publication : α1- and α5-containing laminins regulate the development of bile ducts via β1 integrin signals.

First Author  Tanimizu N Year  2012
Journal  J Biol Chem Volume  287
Issue  34 Pages  28586-97
PubMed ID  22761447 Mgi Jnum  J:225100
Mgi Id  MGI:5691503 Doi  10.1074/jbc.M112.350488
Citation  Tanimizu N, et al. (2012) alpha1- and alpha5-containing laminins regulate the development of bile ducts via beta1 integrin signals. J Biol Chem 287(34):28586-97
abstractText  Signals derived from basal lamina components are important for developing three-dimensional architecture of epithelial tissues. Laminins consisting of alpha, beta, and gamma subunits in basal lamina play pivotal roles in the formation and maintenance of epithelial tissue structures. However, it remains unclear which laminin isoforms transmit signals and how epithelial cells receive them to regulate multiple developmental processes. In three-dimensional culture of a liver progenitor cell line, Hepatic Progenitor Cells Proliferating on Laminin (HPPL), the cells establish apicobasal polarity and form cysts with a central lumen. Neutralizing antibody against beta1 integrin blocked the formation and maintenance of the cyst structure, indicating that beta1 integrin signaling was necessary throughout the morphogenesis. Although the addition of alpha1-containing laminin, a ligand of beta1 integrin, induced cyst formation, it was dispensable for the maintenance of the cyst, suggesting that HPPL produces another ligand for beta1 integrin to maintain the structure. Indeed, we found that HPPL produced alpha5-containing laminin, and siRNA against laminin alpha5 partially inhibited the lumen formation. In fetal liver, p75NTR(+) periportal fibroblasts and bile duct epithelial cells, known as cholangiocytes, expressed alpha1- and alpha5-containing laminins, respectively. In laminin alpha5 KO liver, cholangiocytes normally emerged, but the number of bile ducts was decreased. These results suggest that alpha1-containing laminin is sufficient as a component of the basal lamina for the commitment of bipotential liver progenitors to cholangiocytes and the apicobasal polarization, whereas alpha5-containing laminin is necessary for the formation of mature duct structures. Thus, alpha1- and alpha5-containing laminins differentially regulate the sequential events to form epithelial tissues via beta1 integrin signals.
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