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Development 129, 1521-1532 (2002)
© 2002 The Company of Biologists Limited

Epithelial morphogenesis in hydra requires de novo expression of extracellular matrix components and matrix metalloproteinases

Hiroshi Shimizu1, Xiaoming Zhang2,*, Jinsong Zhang2, Alexey Leontovich2,{dagger}, Kaiyin Fei2,{ddagger}, Li Yan2,{ddagger} and Michael P. Sarras, Jr.2,§

1 National Institute of Genetics, Mishima, Japan
2 University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, KS 66160-7400, USA
* Present address: Children’s Mercy Hospital Medical Center, Kansas City, MO 64108, USA
{dagger} Present address: Department of Experimental Pathology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN 55904, USA
{ddagger} Present address: Harvard University, Boston, MA 02115, USA

§Author for correspondence (e-mail: msarras{at}kumc.edu)

Accepted 14 December 2001

As a member of the phylum Cnidaria, the body wall of hydra is organized as an epithelium bilayer (ectoderm and endoderm) with an intervening extracellular matrix (ECM). Previous studies have established the general molecular structure of hydra ECM and indicate that it is organized as two subepithelial zones that contain basement membrane components such as laminin and a central fibrous zone that contains interstitial matrix components such as a unique type I fibrillar collagen. Because of its simple structure and high regenerative capacity, hydra has been used as a developmental model to study cell-ECM interaction during epithelial morphogenesis. The current study extends previous studies by focusing on the relationship of ECM biogenesis to epithelial morphogenesis in hydra, as monitored during head regeneration or after simple incision of the epithelium. Histological studies indicated that decapitation or incision of the body column resulted in an immediate retraction of the ECM at the wound site followed by a re-fusion of the bilayer within 1 hour. After changes in the morphology of epithelial cells at the regenerating pole, initiation of de novo biogenesis of an ECM began within hours while full reformation of the mature matrix required approximately 2 days. These processes were monitored using probes to three matrix or matrix-associated components: basement membrane-associated hydra laminin ß1 chain (HLM-ß1), interstitial matrix-associated hydra fibrillar collagen (Hcol-I) and hydra matrix metalloproteinase (HMMP). While upregulation of mRNA for both HLM-ß1 and Hcol-I occurred by 3 hours, expression of the former was restricted to the endoderm and expression of the latter was restricted to the ectoderm. Upregulation of HMMP mRNA was also associated with the endoderm and its expression paralleled that for HLM-ß1. As monitored by immunofluorescence, HLM-ß1 protein first appeared in each of the two subepithelial zones (basal lamina) at about 7 hours, while Hcol-I protein was first observed in the central fibrous zone (interstitial matrix) between 15 and 24 hours. The same temporal and spatial expression pattern for these matrix and matrix-associated components was observed during incision of the body column, thus indicating that these processes are a common feature of the epithelium in hydra. The correlation of loss of the ECM, cell shape changes and subsequent de novo biogenesis of matrix and matrix-associated components were all functionally coupled by antisense experiments in which translation of HLM-ß1 and HMMP was blocked and head regeneration was reversibly inhibited. In addition, inhibition of translation of HLM-ß1 caused an inhibition in the appearance of Hcol-I into the ECM, thus suggesting that binding of HLM-ß1 to the basal plasma membrane of ectodermal cells signaled the subsequent discharge of Hcol-I from this cell layer into the newly forming matrix. Given the early divergence of hydra, these studies point to the fundamental importance of cell-ECM interactions during epithelial morphogenesis.

Key words: Hydra, Morphogenesis, ECM, Laminin, Collagen, Matrix metalloproteinase


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© The Company of Biologists Ltd 2002