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First published online 1 November 2006
doi: 10.1242/dev.02621
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Np63 plays an anti-apoptotic role in ventral bladder development
1 Department of Surgery, Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, M5G 1X8,
Canada.
2 Program for Infection, Immunity, Injury and Repair, Hospital for Sick
Children, Toronto, M5G 1X8, Canada.
3 Program of Developmental Biology, Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, M5G
1X8, Canada.
4 Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, NY, USA.
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: peter.kim{at}sickkids.ca)
Accepted 8 September 2006
The bladder, the largest smooth-muscle organ in the human body, is
responsible for urine storage and micturition. P63, a homolog of the
p53 tumor-suppressor gene, is essential for the development of all
stratified epithelia, including the bladder urothelium. The N-terminal
truncated isoform of p63,
Np63, is known to have
anti-apoptotic characteristics. We have established that
Np63
is not only the predominant isoform expressed throughout the bladder, but is
also preferentially expressed in the ventral bladder urothelium during early
development. We observed a host of ventral defects in
p63-/- embryos, including the absence of the abdominal and
ventral bladder walls. This number of ventral defects is identical to bladder
exstrophy, a congenital anomaly exhibited in human neonates. In the absence of
p63, the ventral urothelium was neither committed nor differentiated,
whereas the dorsal urothelium was both committed and differentiated.
Furthermore, in p63-/- bladders, apoptosis in the ventral
urothelium was significantly increased. This was accompanied by the
upregulation of mitochondrial apoptotic mediators Bax and
Apaf1, and concurrent upregulation of p53. Overexpression of
Np63
and
Np63ß in
p63-/- bladder primary cell cultures resulted in a rescue,
evidenced by significantly reduced expressions of Bax and
Apaf1. We conclude that
Np63 plays a crucial
anti-apoptotic role in normal bladder development.
Key words: p63, Bladder exstrophy, Apoptosis, Mouse
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