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American Journal Of Pathology

Publication date: 2022-06-01
Volume: 192 Pages: 943 - 955
Publisher: Elsevier

Author:

Hinley, Jennifer
Duke, Rosalind ; Jinks, Jessica ; Stahlschmidt, Jens ; Keene, David ; Cervellione, Raimondo M ; Mushtaq, Imran ; De Coppi, Paolo ; Garriboli, Massimo ; Southgate, Jennifer

Keywords:

ACTIVATION, BASAL, CANCER, DIFFERENTIATION, EXPRESSION, HUMAN UROTHELIAL CELLS, IDENTIFICATION, Life Sciences & Biomedicine, METAPLASIA, MODEL, Pathology, PPAR-GAMMA, Science & Technology, Carcinoma, Squamous Cell, Cell Differentiation, Epithelial Cells, Humans, Urinary Bladder, Urothelium, 11 Medical and Health Sciences, 32 Biomedical and clinical sciences, 42 Health sciences

Abstract:

Bladder exstrophy (BEX) is a rare developmental abnormality resulting in an open, exposed bladder plate. Although normal bladder urothelium is a mitotically quiescent barrier epithelium, histologic studies of BEX epithelia report squamous and proliferative changes that can persist beyond surgical closure. The current study examined whether patient-derived BEX epithelial cells in vitro were capable of generating a barrier-forming epithelium under permissive conditions. Epithelial cells isolated from 11 BEX samples, classified histologically as transitional (n = 6) or squamous (n = 5), were propagated in vitro. In conditions conducive to differentiated tight barrier formation by normal human urothelial cell cultures, 8 of 11 BEX lines developed transepithelial electrical resistances of more than 1000 Ω.cm2, with 3 squamous lines failing to generate tight barriers. An inverse relationship was found between expression of squamous KRT14 transcript and barrier development. Transcriptional drivers of urothelial differentiation PPARG, GATA3, and FOXA1 showed reduced expression in squamous BEX cultures. These findings implicate developmental interruption of urothelial transcriptional programming in the spectrum of transitional to squamous epithelial phenotypes found in BEX. Assessment of BEX epithelial phenotype may inform management and treatment strategies, for which distinction between reversible versus intractably squamous epithelium could identify patients at risk of medical complications or those who are most appropriate for reconstructive tissue engineering strategies.