The organized array of smooth muscle cells (SMCs) and fibroblasts in the walls of visceral tubular organs arises by patterning and differentiation of mesenchymal progenitors surrounding the epithelial lumen. Here, we show that the TBX2 and TBX3 transcription factors have novel and required roles in regulating these processes in the murine ureter. Co-expression of TBX2 and TBX3 in the inner mesenchymal region of the developing ureter requires canonical WNT signaling. Loss of TBX2/TBX3 in this region disrupts activity of two crucial drivers of the SMC program, Foxf1 and BMP4 signaling, resulting in decreased SMC differentiation and increased extracellular matrix. Transcriptional profiling and chromatin immunoprecipitation experiments revealed that TBX2/TBX3 directly repress expression of the WNT antagonists Dkk2 and Shisa2, the BMP antagonist Bmper and the chemokine Cxcl12. These findings suggest that TBX2/TBX3 are effectors of canonical WNT signaling in the ureteric mesenchyme that promote SMC differentiation by maintaining BMP4 and WNT signaling in the inner region, while restricting CXCL12 signaling to the outer layer of fibroblast-fated mesenchyme.
The mesothelial lining of the lung, the visceral pleura, and of the heart, the epicardium, derive from a common multipotent precursor tissue, the mesothelium of the embryonic thoracic cavity that also contributes to organ-specific mesenchymal cell types. Insight into mesothelial mobilization and differentiation has prevailedin the developing heart while the mesenchymal transition and fate of the visceral pleura are poorly understood. Here, we use the fact that the early mesothelium of both the lung and the heart expresses the transcription factor gene Wt1, to comparatively analyze mesothelial mobilization in the two organs by a genetic cre-loxP-based conditional approach. We show that epicardial cells are mobilized in a large number between E12.5 and E14.5, whereas pleural mobilization occurs only sporadically and variably in few regions of the lung in a temporally highly confined manner shortly after E12.5. Mesothelium-specific inactivation of unique pathway components using a Wt1creERT2 line excluded a requirement for canonical WNT, NOTCH, HH, TGFB, PDGFRA, and FGFR1/FGFR2 signaling in the mesenchymal transition of the visceral pleura but indicated a deleterious effect of activated WNT, NOTCH, and HH signaling on lung development. Epicardial mobilization was negatively impacted on by loss of HH, PDGFRA, FGFR1/2 signaling. Epicardial overactivation of WNT, NOTCH, and HH disturbed epicardial and myocardial integrity. We conclude that mesothelial mobilization in the developing lung and heart differs in timing, quantity and pathway dependency, indicating the organ specificity of the program.
The patterned array of basal, intermediate and superficial cells in the urothelium of the mature ureter arises from uncommitted epithelial progenitors of the distal ureteric bud. Urothelial development requires signaling input from surrounding mesenchymal cells, which, in turn, depend on cues from the epithelial primordium to form a layered fibro-muscular wall. Here, we have identified FGFR2 as a crucial component in this reciprocal signaling crosstalk in the murine ureter. Loss of Fgfr2 in the ureteric epithelium led to reduced proliferation, stratification, intermediate and basal cell differentiation in this tissue, and affected cell survival and smooth muscle cell differentiation in the surrounding mesenchyme. Loss of Fgfr2 impacted negatively on epithelial expression of Shh and its mesenchymal effector gene Bmp4. Activation of SHH or BMP4 signaling largely rescued the cellular defects of mutant ureters in explant cultures. Conversely, inhibition of SHH or BMP signaling in wild-type ureters recapitulated the mutant phenotype in a dose-dependent manner. Our study suggests that FGF signals from the mesenchyme enhance, via epithelial FGFR2, the SHH-BMP4 signaling axis to drive urothelial and mesenchymal development in the early ureter.
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