The core planar cell polarity gene, Vangl2, maintains apical-basal organisation of the corneal epithelium.
D Alessio PanzicaAmy S FindlayRianne van LadesteijnJon Martin CollinsonPublished in: Journal of anatomy (2017)
The role of the core planar cell polarity (PCP) pathway protein, Vangl2, was investigated in the corneal epithelium of the mammalian eye, a paradigm anatomical model of planar cell migration. The gene was conditionally knocked out in vivo and knocked down by siRNA, followed by immunohistochemical, behavioural and morphological analysis of corneal epithelial cells. The primary defects observed in vivo were of apical-basal organisation of the corneal epithelium, with abnormal stratification throughout life, mislocalisation of the cell membrane protein, Scribble, to the basal side of cells, and partial loss of the epithelial basement membrane. Planar defects in migration after wounding and in the presence of an applied electric field were noted. However, knockdown of Vangl2 also retarded cell migration in individual cells that had no contact with their neighbours, which precluded a classic PCP mechanism. It is concluded that some of the planar polarity phenotypes in PCP mutants may arise from disruption of apical-basal polarity.
Keyphrases
- cell migration
- single cell
- induced apoptosis
- optical coherence tomography
- cell therapy
- cell cycle arrest
- wound healing
- genome wide
- signaling pathway
- oxidative stress
- cell death
- bone marrow
- mass spectrometry
- mesenchymal stem cells
- cancer therapy
- small molecule
- atomic force microscopy
- genome wide identification
- wild type