Simian Virus 40 T Antigen-induced Amplification of Pre-parietal Cells in Transgenic Mice.
EFFECTS ON OTHER GASTRIC EPITHELIAL CELL LINEAGES AND EVIDENCE FOR A p53-INDEPENDENT APOPTOTIC MECHANISM THAT OPERATES IN A COMMITTED PROGENITOR (*)
- From the (1)Department of Molecular Biology and Pharmacology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110
- Department of Anatomy, Faculty of Medicine, Kuwait University, Safat 13110, Kuwait
- § To whom correspondence and reprint requests should be addressed: Dept. of Molecular Biology and Pharmacology, Box 8103, Washington University School of Medicine, 660 So. Euclid Ave., St. Louis, MO 63110 . Tel.: 314-362-7243; Fax: 314-362-7058; E-mail: jgordon{at}pharmdec.wustl.edu.
Abstract
Gastric units in the glandular epithelium of the mouse stomach contain several types of continuously renewing epithelial cells.
Acid-producing parietal cells are derived from a multipotent stem cell that also gives rise to mucus-producing pit cells and
pepsinogen- and intrinsic factor-producing zymogenic cells. We used nucleotides −1035 to +24 of the mouse H
/K
-ATPase β subunit gene (H
/K
-ATPase β subunit
) to examine the consequences of expressing simian virus 40 T antigen (SV40 TAg) in the normally rare, nonproliferating, short-lived
pre-parietal cell progenitor. Light and electron microscopic morphologic studies plus multilabel immunohistochemical analyses
of postnatal day (P) 14-80-day transgenic mice revealed that SV40 TAg produces a 50-70-fold amplification of pre-parietal
cells which become the predominant cell type in gastric units. Differentiation to mature parietal cells is blocked, resulting
in hypochlorhydria and an associated systemic iron deficiency. SV40 TAg-induced pre-parietal proliferation is accompanied
by apoptosis. Examination of adult transgenic mice homozygous for p53 wild type or p53 null alleles established that the apoptosis
occurs through a p53-independent pathway. H
/K
-ATPase β subunit
/SV40 Tag is not expressed during differentiation of the zymogenic lineage. Nonetheless, P28-P80 transgenic mice exhibit an
apparent block in the conversion of pre-zymogenic to zymogenic cells. This block appears to be quite specific: conversion
of pre-neck to neck cells and neck to pre-zymogenic cells is not affected. Comparison of normal and transgenic mice that are
p53
or p53
confirmed that the loss of mature zymogenic cells is not dependent upon p53. Although H
/K
-ATPase β subunit
is not active in pit cell progenitors or their differentiated descendants, there is a 2-3-fold increase in mature pit cells
in transgenic animals. Our findings (i) demonstrate an approach for amplifying and characterizing pre-parietal or other progenitor
cell populations in gastric units, (ii) reveal an SV40 TAg-inducible, p53-independent apoptotic mechanism that operates in
a committed epithelial progenitor cell, and (iii) provide a transgenic mouse model for defining factors that may mediate progression
through specific points in the differentiation programs of the parietal and zymogenic cell lineages or that may influence
decisions about allocation to the pit cell lineage.
Footnotes
-
↵* This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant DK33487 (to J. I. G.) and Grant MDA275 from Kuwait University (to S. M. K.). The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore by hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
-
↵1 The abbreviations used are:
- SV40 TAg
-
simian virus large T antigen
- P
-
postnatal day
- DBA
-
Dolicos biflorus agglutinin
- CTB
-
cholera toxin B subunit
- GSII
-
Griffonia simplifolica II agglutinin
- BrdUrd
-
5′-bromo-2′-deoxyuridine
- PCR
-
polymerase chain reaction
- PBS
-
phosphate-buffered saline
- FITC
-
fluorescein isothiocyanate
- TGF
-
transforming growth factor.
-
↵2 S. Karam, Q. Li, and J. Gordon, unpublished observations.
-
↵3 C. Chandrasekaran, C. Coopersmith, J. Pipas, and J. Gordon, manuscript in preparation.
-
↵4 Q. Li, S. Karam, M. Matzuk, and J. Gordon, unpublished observations.











