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Although lumen generation has been extensively studied through so-called cyst-formation assays in Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells, an underlying mechanism that leads to the initial appearance of a solitary lumen remains elusive. Lumen formation is thought to take place at early stages in aggregates containing only a few cells. Evolutionarily conserved polarity protein complexes, namely the Crumbs, Par, and Scribble complexes, establish apicobasal polarity in epithelial cells, and interference with their function impairs the regulated formation of solitary epithelial lumina. Here, we demonstrate that MDCK cells form solitary lumina during their first cell division. Before mitosis, Crumbs3a becomes internalized and concentrated in Rab11-positive recycling endosomes. These compartments become partitioned in both daughter cells and are delivered to the site of cytokinesis, thus forming the first apical membrane, which will eventually form a lumen. Endosome trafficking in this context appears to depend on the mitotic spindle apparatus and midzone microtubules. Furthermore, we show that this early lumen formation is regulated by the apical polarity complexes because Crumbs3 assists in the recruitment of aPKC to the forming apical membrane and interference with their function can lead to the formation of a no-lumen or multiple-lumen phenotype at the two-cell stage.
Although lumen generation has been extensively studied through so-called cyst-formation assays in Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells, an underlying mechanism that leads to the initial appearance of a solitary lumen remains elusive. Lumen formation is thought to take place at early stages in aggregates containing only a few cells. Evolutionarily conserved polarity protein complexes, namely the Crumbs, Par, and Scribble complexes, establish apicobasal polarity in epithelial cells, and interference with their function impairs the regulated formation of solitary epithelial lumina. Here, we demonstrate that MDCK cells form solitary lumina during their first cell division. Before mitosis, Crumbs3a becomes internalized and concentrated in Rab11-positive recycling endosomes. These compartments become partitioned in both daughter cells and are delivered to the site of cytokinesis, thus forming the first apical membrane, which will eventually form a lumen. Endosome trafficking in this context appears to depend on the mitotic spindle apparatus and midzone microtubules. Furthermore, we show that this early lumen formation is regulated by the apical polarity complexes because Crumbs3 assists in the recruitment of aPKC to the forming apical membrane and interference with their function can lead to the formation of a no-lumen or multiple-lumen phenotype at the two-cell stage.
Several types of tumors are known to originate from the pineal region, among them pineal parenchymal tumors (PPTs) and papillary tumors of the pineal region (PTPRs), probably derived from the subcommissural organ. As a result of their rarity, their histologic diagnosis remains difficult. To identify molecular markers, using CodeLink oligonucleotide arrays, gene expression was studied in 3 PPTs (2 pineocytomas and one pineoblastoma), 2 PTPRs, and one chordoid glioma, another rare tumor of the third ventricle. Because PTPR and chordoid glioma may present ependymal differentiation, gene expression was also analyzed in 4 ependymomas. The gene patterns of the 3 PPTs fell in the same cluster. The pineocytomas showed high expression of TPH, HIOMT, and genes related to phototransduction in the retina (OPN4, RGS16, and CRB3), whereas the pineoblastoma showed high expression of UBEC2, SOX4, TERT, TEP1, PRAME, CD24, POU4F2, and HOXD13. Using reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction on 13 PPTs, we demonstrated that PRAME, CD24, POU4F2, and HOXD13 might be candidates for grading PPT with intermediate differentiation. PTPRs, classified with chordoid glioma and separately from ependymomas, showed high expression of SPEDF, KRT18, and genes encoding proteins reported to be expressed in the subcommissural organ, namely ZFH4, RFX3, TTR, and CGRP. Our results highlight the usefulness of gene expression profiling for classify tumors of the pineal region and identify genes with potential use as diagnostic markers.
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