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Renal defects associated with improper polarization of the CRB and DLG polarity complexes in MALS-3 knockout mice.

Authors :
Olsen O
Funke L
Long JF
Fukata M
Kazuta T
Trinidad JC
Moore KA
Misawa H
Welling PA
Burlingame AL
Zhang M
Bredt DS
Source :
The Journal of cell biology [J Cell Biol] 2007 Oct 08; Vol. 179 (1), pp. 151-64.
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

Kidney development and physiology require polarization of epithelia that line renal tubules. Genetic studies show that polarization of invertebrate epithelia requires the crumbs, partition-defective-3, and discs large complexes. These evolutionarily conserved protein complexes occur in mammalian kidney; however, their role in renal development remains poorly defined. Here, we find that mice lacking the small PDZ protein mammalian LIN-7c (MALS-3) have hypomorphic, cystic, and fibrotic kidneys. Proteomic analysis defines MALS-3 as the only known core component of both the crumbs and discs large cell polarity complexes. MALS-3 mediates stable assembly of the crumbs tight junction complex and the discs large basolateral complex, and these complexes are disrupted in renal epithelia from MALS-3 knockout mice. Interestingly, MALS-3 controls apico-basal polarity preferentially in epithelia derived from metanephric mesenchyme, and defects in kidney architecture owe solely to MALS expression in these epithelia. These studies demonstrate that defects in epithelial cell polarization can cause cystic and fibrotic renal disease.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0021-9525
Volume :
179
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Journal of cell biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
17923534
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.200702054