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Cell-cell interactions during remodeling of the intestine at metamorphosis in Xenopus laevis
Authors:Alexander M. Schreiber  Sandeep Mukhi  Donald D. Brown
Affiliation:Carnegie Institution 3520 San Martin Dr., Baltimore, MD 21218, USA
Abstract:
Amphibian metamorphosis is accompanied by extensive intestinal remodeling. This process, mediated by thyroid hormone (TH) and its nuclear receptors, affects every cell type. Gut remodeling in Xenopus laevis involves epithelial and mesenchymal proliferation, smooth muscle thickening, neuronal aggregation, formation of intestinal folds, and shortening of its length by 75%. Transgenic tadpoles expressing a dominant negative TH receptor (TRDN) controlled by epithelial-, fibroblast-, and muscle-specific gene promoters were studied. TRDN expression in the epithelium caused abnormal development of virtually all cell types, with froglet guts displaying reduced intestinal folds, thin muscle and mesenchyme, absence of neurons, and reduced cell proliferation. TRDN expression in fibroblasts caused abnormal epithelia and mesenchyme development, and expression in muscle produced fewer enteric neurons and a reduced inter-muscular space. Gut shortening was inhibited only when TRDN was expressed in fibroblasts. Gut remodeling results from both cell-autonomous and cell-cell interactions.
Keywords:Metamorphosis   Remodeling   Intestine   Thyroid hormone   Transgenesis   Thyroid hormone receptors   Cell-cell interaction
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