An investigation of endoderm to mesoderm signalling in gut development

It has been suggested that the intestinal endoderm is responsive to signals received from underlying mesoderm, indicating cross-talk between the layers. Cdx2 mutant mice develop heterotopias of stomach-type epithelium within the paracaecal region of the intestine. They are therefore an ideal in-vivo...

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Main Author: Stringer, Emma Jane
Other Authors: Pritchard, Catrin
Published: University of Leicester 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.551863
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5518632015-04-03T03:19:54ZAn investigation of endoderm to mesoderm signalling in gut developmentStringer, Emma JanePritchard, Catrin2008It has been suggested that the intestinal endoderm is responsive to signals received from underlying mesoderm, indicating cross-talk between the layers. Cdx2 mutant mice develop heterotopias of stomach-type epithelium within the paracaecal region of the intestine. They are therefore an ideal in-vivo model in which to study whether the loss of endodermal gene expression required for intestinal development leads to stomach-specific mesodermal gene expression. In this study, Sox2, a stomach endoderm-specific marker, was used to detect gastric heterotopias in Cdx2 mutant embryonic intestine using whole-mount in-situ hybridisation. The nature of the underlying mesoderm was investigated using a second marker, Barx1, which is known to be specifically expressed in the stomach mesoderm. RT-PCR was used to detect low levels of Barx1 expression in Cdx2+/- caecum samples. Further investigation using in-situ hybridisation techniques indicated regions of Barx1 expression in a similar distribution to the regions detected using the Sox2 probe. This finding confirms that the mesoderm underlying the Cdx2 mutant gastric heterotopias expresses a stomach-specific gene and therefore that the mesoderm is responsive to endodermal signals. It has been suggested that Cdx2+/- mice do not develop gastric-type intestinal heterotopias postnatally. If proven, this would indicate that intestinal stem cell potential becomes limited at some point during development and prevents the epithelium responding to a postnatal loss of Cdx2 protein. A conditional Cdx2 mouse model is required in order to investigate this hypothesis. The creation of this mouse model formed the second part of this project. Following creation of a targeting vector, transfection into ES cells and injection into blastocysts, chimeric mice were obtained. These mice were successfully bred for germline transmission.612.3University of Leicesterhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.551863http://hdl.handle.net/2381/9919Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 612.3
spellingShingle 612.3
Stringer, Emma Jane
An investigation of endoderm to mesoderm signalling in gut development
description It has been suggested that the intestinal endoderm is responsive to signals received from underlying mesoderm, indicating cross-talk between the layers. Cdx2 mutant mice develop heterotopias of stomach-type epithelium within the paracaecal region of the intestine. They are therefore an ideal in-vivo model in which to study whether the loss of endodermal gene expression required for intestinal development leads to stomach-specific mesodermal gene expression. In this study, Sox2, a stomach endoderm-specific marker, was used to detect gastric heterotopias in Cdx2 mutant embryonic intestine using whole-mount in-situ hybridisation. The nature of the underlying mesoderm was investigated using a second marker, Barx1, which is known to be specifically expressed in the stomach mesoderm. RT-PCR was used to detect low levels of Barx1 expression in Cdx2+/- caecum samples. Further investigation using in-situ hybridisation techniques indicated regions of Barx1 expression in a similar distribution to the regions detected using the Sox2 probe. This finding confirms that the mesoderm underlying the Cdx2 mutant gastric heterotopias expresses a stomach-specific gene and therefore that the mesoderm is responsive to endodermal signals. It has been suggested that Cdx2+/- mice do not develop gastric-type intestinal heterotopias postnatally. If proven, this would indicate that intestinal stem cell potential becomes limited at some point during development and prevents the epithelium responding to a postnatal loss of Cdx2 protein. A conditional Cdx2 mouse model is required in order to investigate this hypothesis. The creation of this mouse model formed the second part of this project. Following creation of a targeting vector, transfection into ES cells and injection into blastocysts, chimeric mice were obtained. These mice were successfully bred for germline transmission.
author2 Pritchard, Catrin
author_facet Pritchard, Catrin
Stringer, Emma Jane
author Stringer, Emma Jane
author_sort Stringer, Emma Jane
title An investigation of endoderm to mesoderm signalling in gut development
title_short An investigation of endoderm to mesoderm signalling in gut development
title_full An investigation of endoderm to mesoderm signalling in gut development
title_fullStr An investigation of endoderm to mesoderm signalling in gut development
title_full_unstemmed An investigation of endoderm to mesoderm signalling in gut development
title_sort investigation of endoderm to mesoderm signalling in gut development
publisher University of Leicester
publishDate 2008
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.551863
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