Molecular staging of epithelial maturation using secretory cell–specific genes as markers

AC Zemke, JC Snyder, BL Brockway… - American journal of …, 2009 - atsjournals.org
AC Zemke, JC Snyder, BL Brockway, JA Drake, SD Reynolds, N Kaminski, BR Stripp
American journal of respiratory cell and molecular biology, 2009atsjournals.org
Bronchiolar Clara cells undergo phenotypic changes during development and in disease.
These changes are poorly described due to a paucity of molecular markers. We used
chemical and transgenic approaches to ablate Clara cells, allowing identification of their
unique gene expression profile. Flavin monooxygenase 3 (Fmo3), paraoxonase 1 (Pon1),
aldehyde oxidase 3 (Aox3), and claudin 10 (Cldn10) were identified as novel Clara cell
markers. New and existing Clara cell marker genes were categorized into three classes …
Bronchiolar Clara cells undergo phenotypic changes during development and in disease. These changes are poorly described due to a paucity of molecular markers. We used chemical and transgenic approaches to ablate Clara cells, allowing identification of their unique gene expression profile. Flavin monooxygenase 3 (Fmo3), paraoxonase 1 (Pon1), aldehyde oxidase 3 (Aox3), and claudin 10 (Cldn10) were identified as novel Clara cell markers. New and existing Clara cell marker genes were categorized into three classes based on their unique developmental expression pattern. Cldn10 was uniformly expressed in the epithelium at Embryonic Day (E)14.5 and became restricted to secretory cells at E18.5. This transition was defined by induction of CCSP. Maturation of secretory cells was associated with progressive increases in the expression of Fmo3, Pon1, Aox3, and Cyp2f2 between late embryonic and postnatal periods. Messenger RNA abundance of all categories of genes was dramatically decreased after naphthalene-induced airway injury, and displayed a sequence of temporal induction during repair that suggested sequential secretory cell maturation. We have defined a broader repertoire of Clara cell–specific genes that allows staging of epithelial maturation during development and repair.
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