Centre for Developmental Biology, Department of Biomedical Sciences, University of Edinburgh, George Square, Edinburgh, UK
*Author for correspondence (e-mail: jamie.davies{at}ed.ac.uk)
Accepted August 14, 2001
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SUMMARY |
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Key words: Erk, kidney, MAP kinase, Branching, Mouse
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INTRODUCTION |
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The collecting duct system of the kidney derives from the ureteric bud, an initially unbranched outgrowth of the Wolffian duct (Davies and Davey 1999). The ureteric bud develops in response to glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF), which is secreted by the nearby metanephrogenic mesenchyme; this system is so powerful that GDNF-soaked beads can elicit supernumerary ureteric buds, and so necessary that most Gdnf/ transgenic mice fail to form any ureteric buds at all (Pichel et al., 1996; Moore et al., 1996; Sainio et al., 1997). The Ret receptor tyrosine kinase that binds GDNF can also be activated by other members of the GDNF family, such as neurturin, persephin and artemin (Baloh et al., 2000). Neurturin can also elicit bud formation in culture assays (Davies et al., 1999), but as this molecule is naturally synthesised by the bud itself, it is unlikely to be an in vivo inducer.
Once inside the metanephrogenic mesenchyme, the ureteric bud begins to arborise to form the collecting duct tree. GDNF is still required for this, and both neurturin and persephin can promote branching in culture (Sainio et al., 1997; Milbrandt et al., 1998; Davies et al., 1999). Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF), produced by the mesenchyme, also supports arborisation of the ureteric bud in culture, although whether it promotes just elongation or both elongation and branching depends on the assay system used (Woolf et al., 1995; Davies et al., 1995), and Hgf/ mice have normal kidneys (Uehara et al., 1995). The mesenchyme-derived bone morphogenetic protein, BMP2, inhibits ureteric bud branching while BMP7, produced by both the mesenchyme and the bud itself, promotes branching at low concentrations and inhibits it at high concentrations (Piscione et al., 1997; Gupta et al., 1999). Activin, produced by mesenchymal cells, also inhibits branching (Ritvos et al., 1995), while transforming growth factor ß (TGFß) promotes elongation at the expense of branching (Ritvos et al., 1995).
As well as being regulated by these growth factors, ureteric bud development also requires certain matrix components. Evidence from both culture experiments and transgenic mice demonstrates a requirement for heparan sulphate glycosaminoglycans (Davies et al., 1995; Bullock et al., 1998). Ureteric bud development also fails or is stunted in transgenic mice deficient in the matrix receptors 3 or
8 integrin (Kreidberg et al., 1996; Muller et al., 1997), but as these molecules are expressed in the mesenchyme rather than the epithelium, the effect on the epithelium may be quite indirect. Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), particularly MMP9, are also required for ureteric bud arborisation in culture (LeLongt et al., 1997).
It is a reasonable assumption that signals from these molecules are passed, via their receptors, to cytoplasmic signal transduction networks in the ureteric bud cells for processing, integration and subsequent control of gene expression and actual morphogenesis. So far, little is known about signal transduction in ureteric bud arborisation, although the work of Gupta et al. (Gupta et al., 1999) has implicated the protein kinase A pathway in transducing branch-inhibiting signals from bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) 2. In other systems, there is some evidence that branching morphogenesis requires the MAP kinase pathway (Fig. 1) (Huang and Erikson, 1996). In the branching of Drosophila tracheal system, MAP kinase is active in the tips of developing branches, and its activity is dependent on the binding of the fibroblast growth factor (FGF)-like molecule, Branchless, to its receptor tyrosine kinase, Breathless (Gabay et al., 1997). In murine salivary glands, the Erk1 and Erk2 MAP kinases mediate the response to epidermal growth factor, and are essential for branching morphogenesis (Kashimata et al., 2000). In a model of epithelial morphogenesis based on culture of Madin-Darby canine kidney cells in collagen gels, the MAP kinase pathway is required for tubulogensis to take place (Khwaja et al., 1998).
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Immunohistochemistry
Immunohistochemistry was carried out using procedures and antibodies we have described before (Davies et al., 1995; Davies et al., 1999). For staining with anti-calbindin-D-28K, a specific marker for ureteric bud and developing collecting ducts (Davies, 1994), cultures were fixed in 20°C methanol, still attached to their filters, for 15 minutes then washed in PBS (phosphate-buffered saline 0.1 M, pH 7.4). They were stained in primary antibody (Sigma C8666 at 1/100) for 3 hours at 37°C, washed in PBS, incubated with 1/100-1/200 FITC or TRITC-conjugated secondary antibody (Sigma) for 2 hours at 37°C, washed in PBS, mounted in glycerol/PBS and viewed under a Leitz epifluorescence microscope. For staining with anti-Ret (Santa Cruz sc-167) and anti-Ros (Santa Cruz sc-6348), cultures were fixed and washed as above, then incubated in 1% bovine serum albumin (BSA) 0.1% Triton X-100 in PBS for 1 hour and incubated in primary antibody (1/50 anti-Ret, 1/200 anti-Ros) in 1% BSA in PBS at 4°C overnight, then stained with secondary antibody as above. Cultures to be stained with phalloidin were fixed in 4% formaldehyde in PBS overnight at 4°C, washed in PBS then stained overnight at 4°C with 220 ng/ml TRITC-phalloidin (Sigma P1951). After washing they were examined using a Leica confocal microscope.
BrdU incorporation and propidium iodide staining
Cell proliferation was studied by adding bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) to culture medium to a final concentration of 100 µM and incubating cultures for a further 16 hours. Cultures were then fixed overnight in 4% formaldehyde in PBS, washed in PBS, incubated in 0.5 mg/ml trypsin for 20 minutes at 37°C, refixed in 4% formalin for 20 minutes at room temperature and washed in PBS. They were then incubated in a mixture of 95% formamide, 5% 0.15 M trisodium citrate for 1 hour at 70°C, washed in PBS and incubated overnight in 1/1000 anti-laminin (Sigma Cat L9393) and 1/40 anti BrdU (Sigma B2531). Cultures were then stained with fluorescent secondary antibodies and examined on a Leica confocal microscope. For quantitation of incorporation, images were scanned in a plane bisecting the tubule (at which the apparent diameter of the tubule was greatest), the tissue outside the ureteric bud was masked off (as shown in Fig. 4A,B), and BrdU-positive nuclei were counted within approximately 110 µm (precisely 3.00 arbitrary units on the image analysis system). Apoptosis was assessed by examining nuclear morphology. Cultures incubated for 24 hours with or without 25 µM PD98059 were stained for calbindin D (28 K) as described above, but with 1 mg/ml RNAse A included in the primary antibody solution (to remove RNA before propidium iodide staining) and 0.1 µg/ml propidium iodide included with the secondary antibody. Cultures were imaged using the confocal microscope and analysed as described above; apoptotic nuclei were identified by their bright, condensed appearance.
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SDS-PAGE and western blotting
Proteins from kidney homogenates were separated on a 7.5% SDS-PAGE gel using a BioRad mini protean II system and then transferred (in 20% methanol, 25 mM Tris, 192 mM glycine) to Hybond nitrocellulose membranes (Amersham). Membranes were incubated for 30 minutes in 5% dried skimmed milk in PBS and probed with rabbit anti-Erk1/2 (1/1000; Sigma), with mouse anti-phosphorylated Erk1/2 (1/1000; Sigma) or with anti-Ret (0.2 µg/ml; Santa Cruz) in PBS containing 1% milk. The secondary antibodies (Sigma) were used at a 1/20,000 dilution (anti-rabbit HRP) or at a 1/2000 dilution (anti-mouse HRP) or at 1/15000 (anti-Goat HRP). Signals were detected by an ECL plus kit (Amersham, RPN 2132) according to the manufacturers recommendation. For all samples, detection of Erk1/2 in any phosphorylation state was used as an homogenisation control to confirm that equal amounts of tissue were being examined on blots used for detection of only phosphorylated Erk1/2. In addition, a BioRad protein assay was used to compare total protein levels within samples.
BioRad protein assay
The amount of protein in various samples were compared to a standard curve of BSA (1-25 µg/ml) in TGMED K buffer (25 mM Tris, 10% glycerol, 5 mM MgCl2, 0.1 mM EDTA, 1 mM DTT, 100 mM KCl, 0.2 mM PMSF). Samples diluted in TGMED K buffer (0.8 ml) were added to 0.2 ml of concentrated BioRad reagent and thoroughly mixed. The samples were left at room temperature for 15 minutes before being read at 595 nm in a Cecil 2000 series spectrophotometer.
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RESULTS |
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At the time of their isolation (E11.5), the kidney rudiments used in this study had developed T-shaped ureteric buds. After 72 hours of culture in normal medium, the buds of these kidneys branched several more times in an organotypic manner (Fig. 3A), as has been described many times elsewhere (Grobstein 1953; Davies and Davey, 1999). When cultured in media supplemented with 10 µM-45 µM PD98059, the balance of elongation and branching of the ureteric buds was greatly disturbed so that they produced long tubules with few branches (Fig. 3B,C). Lower concentrations of PD98059 reduced but did not eliminate branching (see Fig. 3E for a dose-response curve). The effect of PD98059 was reversible, so that kidney rudiments cultured in the presence of PD98059 for 40 hours and then placed for a further 48 hours in standard medium produced an arbour, the medullary (older) part of which had long under-branched tubules and the cortical (newer) parts had an apparently normal density of new branches (Fig. 3D). Western blotting for phosphorylated Erk1/2 confirmed that 20 µM PD98059 almost eliminated Erk activation without affecting the amounts of Erk protein present (see Fig. 7, right-most track).
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Little is known about the role of the cytoskeleton in ureteric bud branching, but actin/myosin contraction is known to be important in several examples of epithelial morphogenesis, including wound healing, folding of the colon and branching of the salivary gland (Nakanishi and Ishii, 1989; Coloni and Conforti, 1993; McCluskey and Martin, 1995). We have therefore compared the distribution of filamentous actin in normal kidneys and those treated with PD98059. In normal kidneys, there is an intense concentration of actin filaments in the apices of cells at the tips of the ureteric bud (Fig. 4E), but in PD98059 treated kidneys this effect is lost and the concentration of actin filaments at the tip is similar to that in the rest of the ureteric bud (Fig. 4F). One other marker of ureteric buds tips is the presence at the tip of fine processes of laminin that appear to extend into the mesenchyme from the basement membrane (Davies et al., 1995). These can be seen pointing in several directions, with respect to the ureteric bud, from the tips of ureteric buds grown in control medium (Fig. 4A). By contrast, ureteric buds of kidneys grown in the presence of PD98059 showed very few laminin processes, and those that existed were typically found facing only forwards with respect to the bud, as shown in Fig. 4B.
Cell proliferation, apoptosis and cytoskeletal arrangement are aspects of cell biology that are likely to be closely involved with the actual production of morphological change, downstream of signals that induce that change. Other markers of ureretic bud exist that are likely to be upstream, for example, the expression of the receptor tyrosine kinases Ret, the receptor for the GDNF family (Schuchardt et al., 1994; Sainio et al., 1997) and Ros, whose ligand is unknown (Tessarollo et al., 1992). Immunofluorescent detection showed that Ret was expressed by the ureteric buds of both control and 25 µM PD98059-treated kidneys. In both cases, expression could be detected throughout the bud (Fig. 4G,H). This pattern is normal for such young, small buds, and has been described before at both the mRNA and protein levels (Pachnis et al., 1993; Liu et al., 1996); only later in embryonic development, when the bud is larger, is Ret lost from the bud stalk. Immunofluorescent detection of Ros again showed the molecule to be present in the presence or absence of 25 µM PD98059 (Fig. 4I,J). It was present throughout the bud, which is again normal for these early stages of development and has been described before (Kanwar et al., 1995). A subtle difference could, however, be detected using high magnification confocal microscopy; in about half of the ureteric bud tips of normal kidneys, expression of Ros at the basal surface of the cells, where it is generally strong, is reduced in the few cells right at the tip (Fig. 4J, arrow), but this effect was never seen in kidneys incubated in PD98059.
In summary, the overall effect of inhibiting the activation of Erk1/2 was to inhibit ureteric bud branching while allowing some extension. At a cellular level, rates of apoptosis in the bud showed no detectable change but rates of cell proliferation fell significantly, the concentration of actin filaments typical of branching tips was lost and there was little production of laminin processes typical of normal bud tips. Expression of Ret and Ros receptor tyrosine kinases was, however, maintained at least for the duration of these experiments (1-2 days).
An active Erk MAP kinase pathway is required by the ureteric bud itself
Active Erk MAP-kinase is expressed by both the ureteric bud and the mesenchyme that surrounds it. The inhibition of ureteric bud development caused by inhibition of the MAP kinase pathway might therefore be explained by an indirect mechanism in which the mesenchyme requires active MAP kinase in order to produce an environment that will support bud arborisation. To discriminate between this possibility and a direct requirement for Erk activation in the bud itself, it was necessary to examine the behaviour of the ureteric bud, with and without MAP kinase inhibitors, in a host tissue other than metanephrogenic mesenchyme. Most other mesenchymes will not support ureteric bud development, but lung mesenchyme will do so in media supplemented with exogenous GDNF (Sainio et al., 1997). We have found that branching morphogenesis of E11 murine lung is relatively unaffected by concentrations of PD98059 (up to 25 µM) that inhibit branching in the kidney, and even at 75 µM PD98059, some lung branching continues (Fig. 5). Lung mesenchyme is therefore still able to support epithelial arborisation even in 25 µM PD98059.
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The hypothesis that MAP kinase activity is required by the ureteric bud itself was further tested by exploiting the hanging drop culture system of Sainio et al. (Sainio et al., 1997). These authors showed that ureteric buds cultured in hanging drops would lose their integrity over the course of 24 hours or so, their cells parting company to form a diffuse mass with a mesenchyme-like appearance. Inclusion of GDNF in the culture medium, however, maintained the epithelial appearance of the buds so that they did not break up. The maintenance of epithelial morphology in hanging drops when provided with adequate growth factors is one observable aspect of ureteric bud behaviour that does not require the influence of a supporting mesenchyme. We have therefore tested the effect of MAP-kinase inhibition on ureteric bud behaviour in this mesenchyme-free system. 50 ng/ml GDNF maintained the epithelial morphology of isolated ureteric buds (Fig. 5G), as described by Sainio et al. (Sainio et al., 1997), but inclusion of 10-20 µM PD98059 in the culture medium abrogated this effect, allowing the ureteric buds to shed cells and to lose their integrity as if they had received no GDNF (Fig. 5H).
Erk phosphorylation is regulated by GDNF signalling and by sulphated glycosaminoglycans, though not detectably by BMP2
If the MAP kinase pathway is a genuine regulator intracellular of ureteric bud branching, it would be expected to be affected by at least one extracellular regulator of branching. Many extracellular regulators probably remain to be identified, but several are known, including components of the cell matrix (laminins, nidogen and sulphated glycosaminoglycans) (Ekblom et al., 1994; Davies et al., 1995; Kispert et al., 1996; Bullock et al., 1998) and growth factors (GDNF, neurturin, persephin, HGF, BMP2, BMP7, TGFß) (Woolf et al., 1995; Ritvos et al., 1995; Vega et al., 1996; Vukicevic et al., 1996; Sainio et al., 1997; Milbrandt et al., 1998; Davies et al., 1999; Gupta et al., 1999). Of these, sulphated glycosaminoglycans and GDNF are outstanding because their importance has been demonstrated by both transgenic and culture studies (Pichel et al., 1996; Moore et al., 1996; Davies et al., 1995; Bullock et al., 1998). We therefore investigated whether either of these two extracellular regulators of ureteric bud branching play a role in controlling the intracellular MAP kinase pathway.
The connection between GDNF signalling and Erk MAP kinases was explored by using anti-GDNF antibodies, which have already been shown to inhibit ureteric bud branching strongly (Vega et al., 1996; Davies et al., 1999). As expected, kidney rudiments incubated in 10 µg/ml anti-GDNF showed a marked reduction of ureteric bud development after 48 hours compared with controls (Fig. 6). Analysis of Erk phosphorylation in ureteric buds after this length of incubation was not possible, because the anatomy of control kidneys had become too complex for the ureteric bud to be isolated, but it was possible to isolate ureteric buds, by dissection in cold medium, from both experimental and control antibodies after a 7 hour incubation with and without 10 µg/ml anti-GDNF. Western blotting of these samples showed that anti-GDNF treatment reduced phosphorylation of Erk MAP kinase without affecting the net amount of Erk protein in the tissues (Fig. 6). GDNF is therefore a significant regulator of Erk activation in the developing ureteric bud.
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BMP2 is a powerful negative regulator of ureteric bud branching (Piscione et al., 1997; Gupta et al., 1999). Being a member of the TGFß superfamily of growth factors, BMP2 would be expected to signal via SMAD proteins (Massagué, 2000), and Gupta et al. (Gupta et al., 1999) have shown that, in kidney, BMP2 signals via Smad1 and Smad4. Some data have, however, implicated MAP kinase pathways as additional downstream effectors of signalling by members of the TGFß superfamily, and one report shows this effect in a kidney epithelial cell line (Sano et al., 1999). We therefore tested the ability of BMP2 treatment to modulate Erk MAP kinase activity in the ureteric bud. Treatment of kidneys with 10 nM BMP2 caused a dramatic inhibition of ureteric bud branching (Fig. 8A,B), but failed to produce a detectable change in Erk1/2 activity (Fig. 8C). Therefore not every modulator of ureteric bud morphogenesis acts via the Erk MAP kinase pathway.
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DISCUSSION |
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Signal transduction through the Erk pathway is known to be involved in regulating the branching morphogenesis of epithelium in two other systems, mammalian salivary glands and Drosophila tracheae (Kashimata et al., 2000; Gabay et al., 1997). That it should also be involved in development of the ureteric bud raises the possibility that branching morphogenesis may use conserved intracellular mechanisms across a wide variety of systems. There are, however, detailed differences between the three model systems that make comparisons complicated. In both kidney and salivary gland, for example, branching morphogenesis is accompanied by cell proliferation, whereas the tracheal system of Drosophila develops by cell enlargement and rearrangement without multiplication. In addition, inhibition of Erk activation in salivary glands results in cessation of both growth and extension (Kashimato et al., 2000), but in our experiments with kidneys, tubule extension continued even when branching was inhibited. An involvement of Erks in branching systems with these differences may either indicate that the pathway is truly fundamental and that its importance lies deeper than detailed differences, or it may simply result from Erk being involved in quite different processes in the three organs.
To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of GDNF signalling being transduced via the Erk MAP kinase pathway in epithelial cells, but a link between GDNF and Erk has been well established in several neuronal cell types. Ret activation, by GDNF and related ligands, activates both Erk MAP kinase and phosphatidyl-inositol-3-kinase in sympathetic neurones of the superior cervical ganglion, in chick motoneurones and in a motoneuron-derived cell line (Kotzbauer et al., 1996; Creedon et al., 1996; Soler et al., 1999; Trupp, 1999). In chicken motoneurones in primary culture, only the phosphatidyl-inositol-3-kinase pathway is required for GDNF-mediated cell survival (Soler et al., 1999), suggesting that the function of MAP kinase (if any) may be more to do with neurite outgrowth. Certainly, Erk MAP kinase activity is associated with neurite outgrowth in response to other growth factors in neuronal models such as PC12 cells (Qiu and Green 1992; Cowley et al., 1994; Pang et al., 1995; Fukuda et al., 1995; Creedon et al., 1996). Neurite production usually involves branching as well as growth, particularly in the case of dendritic trees, so the involvement of the Erk pathway in neurite morphogenesis again raises a possibility of a conserved role for the pathway in branching morphogenesis even across different types of tissue.
The dependence of the MAP kinase pathway in the ureteric bud on sulphated glycosaminoglycans is intriguing. Glycosaminoglycans have many known roles, including presentation of growth factors to their high-affinity receptors and organisation of the extracellular matrix. Either role could involve them in regulating epithelial Erk activity. If the Erk MAP kinase cascade in ureteric bud is controlled by the receptors for any growth factors that require presentation by sulphated glycosaminoglycans, then loss of the glycans would produce defective signalling and hence defective activation of MAP kinase. At least two molecules present in developing kidney, FGF2 and HGF, are known to be presented by sulphated glycosaminoglycans (Rapreager et al., 1991; Lyon et al., 1998), and there could be many more, possibly including GDNF itself. Cells sense their matrix via integrin and other matrix receptors, and integrin-containing complexes of cells can signal, via focal adhesion kinase and Grb2, to the Ras-MAP kinase pathway (Chen et al., 1998). Defective matrix organisation caused by lack of sulphated glycosaminoglycans could therefore affect MAP kinase without any link to growth factors. It is difficult to use studies from other cell types for guidance about which is the most likely role of glycans in regulating Erk, because there is such variation in the way that the Erk pathway is controlled. In PC12 pheochromocytoma cells, for example, G-protein-coupled receptor-mediated Erk activation is almost exclusively dependent on focal adhesion kinase, whereas in rat1 fibroblasts it is almost exclusively receptor tyrosine kinases (Della Rocca et al., 1989).
Erks have many effects in different cell types, and all tissues examined so far contain immunoreactive Erk1 and Erk2 (Cobb et al., 1994). Erk was first characterised in the context of proliferative responses of cells to mitogens (Rossomando et al., 1989), and ensuring adequate levels of proliferation may be one important role for Erks in ureteric bud morphogenesis. We found that cell proliferation is concentrated in the very tips of normal ureteric buds, suggesting that elongation, as well as branching, takes place mainly terminally. When Erk activation was prevented, there was significantly less cell proliferation but what remained was still concentrated at the termini of the bud, and was presumably the cause of the tubule elongation that still took place. It seems unlikely, however, that reduced proliferation can alone account for the absence of branching; given that some elongation continues, something else must account for the fact that the elongation is now directed only forwards. In addition, we have previously reported that direct inhibition of cell cycling, using methotrexate, has opposite effects to those of MAP kinase inhibition, in that branch initiation continues but elongation ceases (Davies et al., 1995).
One other possible function of the Erk pathway is modulation of adhesion between ureteric bud cells. We found the Erk pathway to be necessary for GDNF to maintain isolated ureteric buds as adhering, epithelial cysts and prevent them breaking up into loosely aggregated scattered cells, as happens in the absence of GDNF. This is an interesting result, in that it implies that Erk can modulate cell adhesion in this tissue, but is also paradoxical (as was the original observation of Sainio et al. that GDNF maintains integrity (Sainio et al., 1997), for in other systems branching morphogenesis is associated with molecules that promote cell scatter (e.g. HGF) (Santos and Nigam, 1993).
The tips of ureteric buds possess fine processes rich in laminin, contiguous with the basement membrane (at least at the resolution of light microscopy), that reach out into the surrounding mesenchyme (Davies et al., 1995). In kidneys, growing in normal media, these processes emanate from several points of the distended tips, so that they point in several directions, but in kidneys treated with MAP kinase kinase inhibitor, there are few processes and they point only forwards. The nature and function of these processes has yet to be elucidated, but in the light of the correlation presented here that processes project forwards and sideways in branching ureteric buds, but only forwards in ureteric buds that only elongate it is tempting to speculate that the elongating ureteric bud may follow where they lead. In that case, whatever effect the Erk pathway has on process formation would be a primary effector of branching. The Erk pathway has been shown to interact with the cytoskeleton, which might be a potent effector of branching morphogenesis in ureteric bud as it is known to be in salivary gland (Nakanishi and Ishii, 1989). In particular, Erks interact with both the actin-binding protein, calponin, and with actin itself (Leinweber et al., 1999). This may account for our observations that inhibition of Erks results in a failure of ureteric bud tips to produce their normal pattern of actin filaments. In some cells, at least, the Erk pathway can also interact with other protein kinases in the cytoplasm and on membrane receptors such as EGF-R (Davis, 1995; Tibbles and Woodgett, 1999), so that it could modulate the effects of other regulators of ureteric bud development.
The morphological effect of inhibiting Erk activation in the kidney is unusual, in that most other treatments that inhibit ureteric bud morphogenesis in culture (e.g. BMP2, anti-GDNF, anti-HGF, chlorate, glycanases, etc.) inhibit both branch initiation and duct elongation. Inhibition of Erk activation inhibits branching but at least some elongation continues. Continued elongation in the absence of branching strengthens previous suggestions that growth and branching of the ureteric bud may be controlled separately, the earlier observations being that TGFß seems to encourage elongation at the expense of branching, and that treatment of rudiments deprived of sulphated glycosaminoglycans with HGF rescues elongation without rescuing branching (Ritvos et al., 1995; Davies et al., 1995). Separate control of branching and elongation could in principle allow more flexibility of the shape of a branched epithelial system over both developmental and evolutionary time, and in the particular case of the kidney, this flexibility may be used when the simple, frequently branching dichotomous pattern of early development gives way to the arcade production of late development, in which elongation dominates (al-Awqati and Goldberg, 1998).
Three classical signal transduction proteins have now been implicated in ureteric bud development: protein kinase C, which induces branching (Davies et al., 1995); protein kinase A, which inhibits branching (Gupta et al., 1999); and Erk MAP kinase, which is necessary for branching (this report). The protein kinase A pathway is regulated by (at least) BMP2 and BMP7, and the Erk MAP kinase pathway by (at least) GDNF and glycosaminoglycans. In order to understand how these paths integrate the many regulatory influences on the ureteric bud, it will be important to determine which other known regulators lie upstream of them, how they regulate each other and, most crucially, to identify the intracellular targets of these pathways that link them to final effectors of morphogenesis.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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