Menko A Sue, Zhang Liping, Schiano Frank, Kreidberg Jordan A, Kukuruzinska Maria A
Department of Pathology, Anatomy, and Cell Biology, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Dev Dyn. 2002 Jul;224(3):321-33. doi: 10.1002/dvdy.10111.
Submandibular gland (SMG) development involves branching morphogenesis of the salivary epithelium into the surrounding mesenchyme, accompanied by proliferation and differentiation of immature salivary cells along acinar and ductal cell lineages. During development, salivary cell sorting and cell-cell adhesion are likely to be directed by cadherin adhesion receptors. We show that two classic cadherins, N- and E-cadherin, participate in SMG development. Early in embryonic morphogenesis, both cadherins displayed diffuse staining with regionalized localization to cell-cell borders. At this stage, significant pools of N- and E-cadherins were Triton-soluble, suggesting that fractions of these molecules were not localized to stable junctional complexes associated with the actin cytoskeleton. With cytodifferentiation, cadherins became progressively Triton-insoluble, and this correlated with their organization at cell-cell interfaces. In the cytodifferentiated SMG, N-cadherin was absent, whereas E-cadherin remained at cell-cell interfaces. Early in morphogenesis, beta-catenin was also primarily Triton-soluble, and its association with the actin cytoskeleton and localization to the adherens junctions increased with cytodifferentiation. Greater recruitment of cadherins and beta-catenin to cell-cell borders was paralleled by changes in membrane association of two Rho GTPases, Cdc42 and RhoA. N-cadherin was detected only at early stages of postnatal development, whereas E-cadherin and beta-catenin became progressively Triton-insoluble during differentiation. Our results indicate that N-cadherin functions transiently in SMG development. On the other hand, E-cadherin and beta-catenin appear to play different roles during tissue organization and cytodifferentiation. In early morphogenesis, E-cadherin and beta-catenin are likely to participate in SMG remodeling, whereas during cytodifferentiation, they form stable cell-cell contacts, and may collaborate with Rho GTPases in the establishment and maintenance of salivary cell polarity.
下颌下腺(SMG)的发育涉及唾液上皮向周围间充质的分支形态发生,同时伴随着未成熟唾液细胞沿腺泡和导管细胞谱系的增殖和分化。在发育过程中,唾液细胞的分选和细胞间黏附可能由钙黏蛋白黏附受体介导。我们发现两种经典的钙黏蛋白,N-钙黏蛋白和E-钙黏蛋白,参与了SMG的发育。在胚胎形态发生早期,这两种钙黏蛋白均呈现弥漫性染色,并在细胞间边界区域化定位。在此阶段,大量的N-钙黏蛋白和E-钙黏蛋白可被Triton溶解,这表明这些分子的一部分并未定位于与肌动蛋白细胞骨架相关的稳定连接复合体。随着细胞分化,钙黏蛋白逐渐变得不溶于Triton,这与它们在细胞间界面的组织方式相关。在细胞分化的SMG中,N-钙黏蛋白缺失,而E-钙黏蛋白仍保留在细胞间界面。在形态发生早期,β-连环蛋白也主要可被Triton溶解,其与肌动蛋白细胞骨架的结合以及在黏着连接处的定位随着细胞分化而增加。两种Rho GTPases,Cdc42和RhoA的膜结合变化与钙黏蛋白和β-连环蛋白向细胞间边界的更多募集相平行。N-钙黏蛋白仅在出生后发育的早期阶段被检测到,而E-钙黏蛋白和β-连环蛋白在分化过程中逐渐变得不溶于Triton。我们的结果表明N-钙黏蛋白在SMG发育中短暂发挥作用。另一方面,E-钙黏蛋白和β-连环蛋白在组织构建和细胞分化过程中似乎发挥着不同的作用。在早期形态发生中,E-钙黏蛋白和β-连环蛋白可能参与SMG的重塑,而在细胞分化过程中,它们形成稳定的细胞间接触,并可能在唾液细胞极性的建立和维持中与Rho GTPases协同作用。