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First published online November 27, 2006
doi: 10.1242/10.1242/jcs.03269
Commentary |

1 Departments of Medicine and Physiology and Cellular Biophysics, College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia University, 630 W 168th St, New York, NY 10032, USA
2 Department of Pediatrics, University of Rochester School of Medicine, Rochester, NY, USA
Author for correspondence (e-mail: qa1{at}columbia.edu)
Accepted 20 September 2006
| Summary |
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Key words: Hensin, DMBT1, Epithelial terminal differentiation, Columnar epithelia
| Introduction |
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During embryonic development, the rudiments of most organs contain what look like generic epithelia, flat cells that are connected by tight junctions and adherens junctions rest on a basement membrane and exhibit apical-basal polarity. We can term these cells proto-epithelia in part because all other epithelia originate from them. In mature organs, the shape of cells is quite different and characteristic of the organ in question. There are `simple' epithelia, i.e. epithelia composed of a sheet of single cells. Some of these are squamous (such as endothelia), others are cuboidal (e.g. in the kidney tubules) or columnar (e.g. in the intestine). There are also multi-layered epithelia such as transitional (e.g. urinary bladder) and stratified squamous epithelia (e.g. skin).
In some cases these terminally differentiated cells and their less differentiated precursors exist simultaneously. In the small and large intestine, the epithelial sheet is organized into characteristic folds to form crypts and villi. Crypts contain stem cells that can generate all four types of epithelial cells of the intestine (Marshman et al., 2002
). In the prostate, basal cells also thought to be stem cells co-exist with luminal cells that are their differentiated progeny. Similarly in the skin, basal cells generate the squamous epithelium that is destined to be cornified. In each organ, the morphology of the less differentiated cell is clearly different from that of the terminally differentiated one and their gene expression patterns of course differ. It is difficult to define characteristics common to all terminally differentiated epithelia but not their precursors. However, at least in simple epithelia, we can provide a preliminary list. Perhaps the most obvious difference is in the apical compartment of the cell. For instance, embryonic pancreatic acinar cells or mucus secreting goblet cells have no secretory granules but fully differentiated mature ones do. Another obvious difference is the presence of brush border microvilli in the intestine: crypt cells have few microvilli whereas the absorptive epithelia of the villus (or surface in the colon) have exuberant microvilli. Microvilli contain cytokeratins, actin and actin-binding proteins such as villin. Although some crypt cells express these proteins, their organization into a subapical terminal web is a characteristic of absorptive cells.
Since all of these cell types originate from proto-epithelia, one can posit a pathway of epithelial differentiation that goes from proto-epithelia to terminally differentiated epithelia. Defining this pathway is an important goal, because many cancer biologists believe that a block in terminal differentiation of epithelial cells can be a root cause of cancer. Various molecules play a role, including members of the Wnt, FGF and BMP gene families. Here we discuss a key driver of this process, the extracellular matrix protein hensin.
| Intercalated cells in the kidney |
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-intercalated cell in which the H+ ATPase is located in the apical membrane whereas the Cl-: HCO3- exchanger is located in the basolateral membrane. Remarkably, the ß-intercalated cell converts to an
phenotype when the tubule segment (or the animal in vivo) is exposed to an acid medium (Schwartz et al., 1985
The ß-intercalated cell can be established as an immortalized clonal cell line. Confluent epithelia formed by cells from this line secrete HCO3- from the apical side. Seeding them at low density on filters generates flat, large cells with minimal surface microvilli. These show no apical endocytosis and have no actin network underneath the apical membrane. Remarkably, when the same cells are seeded at high density and allowed to proceed to confluence, they assume a completely different phenotype: they form columnar cells that are twice as tall and develop robust apical endocytosis and a thick sub-apical actin cytoskeleton. The low-density cells are `real' epithelia; i.e. they have polarized apical and basolateral membranes that contain different proteins (van Adelsberg et al., 1994
) and lipids (van't Hof et al., 1997
). They contain lateral and tight junctions but have no sub-apical actin and do not express villin or cytokeratin 19. By contrast, the high-density cells have sub-apical actin, and express cytokeratin 19 and villin (Vijayakumar et al., 1999
) (Fig. 1). In vivo,
-intercalated cells have vigorous apical endocytosis whereas the ß form cells have none. The ß form has essentially no microvilli whereas the
form exhibits prominent apical folds and microvilli. In addition, examination of electron micrographs of the cortical collecting tubule shows that
-intercalated cells are taller, they jut into the tubule lumen whereas the ß forms are more flat. High seeding density thus induces a transformation of ß-intercalated cells similar to that seen in vivo when they convert into
-intercalated cells. Note that all of these studies were performed in a cell culture system where the inducing event is seeding cells at high density. During epithelial differentiation in vivo, all cells touch each other and hence they are at a constant density. Hence, the high density seeding must be spuriously activating a pathway that is normally acting using another signaling event.
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| Hensin, a phenotypic regulator of epithelial cells |
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Hensin is a 180 kDa secreted glycoprotein that is expressed in all epithelia tested (Takito et al., 1999
). It has a large number of alternatively spliced isoforms that vary in size up to an apparent molecular weight of 340 kDa (Fig. 2). In many organs, the more caudal a tissue, the higher is the level of expression; for instance, in the gastro-intestinal tract the highest level of expression is in the colon. In the kidney, hensin is expressed only in the ureteric bud lineage (also caudal) but there is no expression in the epithelia derived from the metanephric mesenchyme. Hensin is also expressed in the brain, in the lung, in the skin and even in macrophage derivatives such as osteoclasts.
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110 residues long and were first identified in the complement components C1r and C1s. They are present in a large number of proteins but remain of unknown function (Bork and Beckmann, 1993
The genomic sequence of hensin encodes 18 SRCR domains, 6 CUB domains and 1 ZP region, as well as a transmembrane domain. Each epithelium seems to express a specific splice form. The cDNAs of some of these isoforms reveal the presence of a membrane anchor, but in the intestine where this sequence is present all hensin forms are nevertheless secreted (Cheng et al., 1996
); in other cases (such as the salivary form gp340) (Holmskov et al., 1999
), hensin lacks the anchor and clearly is secreted. There have been some suggestions that secreted forms of hensin play a role in immune defense by binding to bacteria (Madsen et al., 2003
), surfactants or trefoil factors (Thim and Mortz, 2000
). However, most of these are based on in vitro binding studies, and given that many of the domains of hensin are protein-protein interaction domains it is difficult at present to decide whether these studies actually reveal physiological roles of hensin. Antibodies that recognize SRCR domains block the ability of hensin to induce formation of columnar epithelia, which suggests that these domains play a crucial role in either binding to receptors or to the formation of the hensin fibril (see below).
| Polymerization of hensin |
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Thus, like other extracellular matrix proteins, hensin is synthesized as a soluble monomer but it is only the multimers that deposit in the basement membrane and mediate its functions. Some ECM proteins such as collagen need to be specifically proteolyzed to generate the insoluble forms. Others, such as fibronectin, require the cell to participate in the formation of the complex. In the case of hensin, at least three other proteins are required to form the active multimers. The first one identified was galectin 3. Galectin is a member of a large family of lectins that bind to ß-galactosides. It can convert hensin monomers to dimers. Moreover, extraction of galectin 3 from insoluble hensin removes its ability to convert cells to columnar epithelia and adding galectin3 back restores this ability (Hikita et al., 2000
). This suggests that galectin 3 not only stimulates formation of the hensin fibril, perhaps by making hensin dimers, but also might maintain these multimers in the correct orientation. Galectin 3 unlike other galectins contains a protein-protein interaction domain in addition to the carbohydrate-recognition domain. Hence, it is likely to induce multimeric association of glycoproteins. Interestingly the galectin-3-knockout mice are viable and fertile and do not seem to have any anomalies in epithelial organs (Colnot et al., 1998
). All galectins are defined by the presence of homologous carbohydrate-binding domains; hence if their role in hensin polymerization is mediated by binding of the lectin to carbohydrate moieties, other members of this large family of proteins could substitute for galectin 3 in hensin polymerization.
A cis-trans peptidyl prolyl isomerase is also necessary for hensin polymerization and this could be a member of the cyclophilin family of prolyl isomerases (Watanabe et al., 2005
). In addition, recent studies suggest that integrins need to be activated and that tyrosine phosphorylation of ß1 integrin is crucial (our unpublished results). The order in which these three proteins act in hensin polymerization is not yet clear.
Conversion of ß- to -intercalated cells is mediated by hensin
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-intercalated cells, which absorb HCO3-. By measuring the intracellular pH of individual ß-intercalated cells, one can demonstrate that the same cells that secrete HCO3- through an apical Cl-:HCO3- exchanger before acid exposure begin to secrete acid and develop a basolateral Cl-:HCO3- exchanger. Since the cells internalize the apical exchanger, they must also develop apical endocytosis (Schwartz et al., 2002
intercalated cells shows that the
intercalated is much taller than the ß form suggesting that this process is also a columnarization event. | General role of hensin in differentiation in vivo |
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| Hensin in cancer |
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| Hensin in embryonic development |
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Once the blastocyst is implanted, the ES cells begin to divide and the embryo elongates to form the egg cylinder stage. Hensin is expressed in the visceral endoderm (VE). The top part of this is the extra-embryonic VE. The bottom half is the embryonic VE, which regulates the epiblast - i.e. the embryo proper (Fig. 4). The extra-embryonic VE is a columnar epithelium. The embryonic VE is a squamous epithelium except at the tip, where a few cells are columnar. Hensin is expressed only in the columnar epithelial cells. Remarkably, these few columnar cells (distal VE) migrate upwards and within a few hours become squamous epithelia (anterior VE) and cause that region of the epiblast to become the head (Srinivas et al., 2004
). Blocking the movement of VE by knocking out the transcription factor Hex, which is normally expressed in these cells, results in truncation of the head elements (Martinez-Barbara, 2000).
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These studies suggest that seeding ES cells on hensin or laminin results in a differentiation event. However, the surface epithelium of the hensin-grown hemispheres is columnar and thus similar to the intercalated cell line described above. Remarkably, the cells on the surface of the hemispheres seeded on laminin are instead flat, low and squamous. Both of these epithelia (but not those seeded on collagen IV or fibronectin) express VE markers such as BMP2 and transthyretin. However, cells seeded on laminin express
-fetoprotein, another marker of the VE. Another difference between these two types of epithelia is the expression of desmosomal proteins. Desmocollin is expressed in hemispheres grown on hensin; those grown on laminin instead express desmoglein. In embryos at the egg cylinder stage desmoglein is seemingly expressed in all VE cells. Note also that the hemispheres seeded on laminin are easily detached whereas those seeded on hensin are much more firmly attached. Since the columnar epithelia in the distal VE migrate to form the anterior VE, which is rather squamous during migration, the cells might switch signaling from hensin polymers to laminin polymers? If so, how does this occur? They could degrade hensin and lay down laminin or replace one receptor by another or alter some other signaling event.
| Future prospects |
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| Footnotes |
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| References |
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