The response of female urogenital tract epithelia to mesenchymal inductors is restricted by the germ layer origin of the epithelium: prostatic inductions
- PMID: 1773919
- DOI: 10.1111/j.1432-0436.1991.tb00248.x
The response of female urogenital tract epithelia to mesenchymal inductors is restricted by the germ layer origin of the epithelium: prostatic inductions
Abstract
The epithelium of the mammalian vagina arises from two distinct germ layers, endoderm from the urogenital sinus and mesoderm from the Müllerian ducts. While neonatal vaginal epithelium can be induced to form prostate which is normally an endodermal derivative, it has not been determined whether this ability to form prostate is shared by both mesoderm- and endoderm-derived vaginal epithelia. To test the competence of vaginal epithelia we have isolated sinus-derived and Müllerian-derived vaginal epithelia from newborn mice, combined them with rat urogenital sinus mesenchyme, and grown the tissue recombinants for 4 weeks in male athymic nude mice. Endoderm-derived sinus vaginal epithelium was induced to form prostatic tissue which expressed prostate-specific secretory proteins in 21 of 23 tissue recombinants. Müllerian-derived vaginal epithelium formed small ducts and cysts lined by a simple epithelium. These latter tissue recombinants lacked any evidence of prostatic secretory proteins. Similarly, endoderm-derived urethral epithelium was induced to form prostate (17 of 17 cases), while mesoderm-derived uterine epithelium was not (0 of 13 cases). Therefore, the ability to form prostatic epithelium was limited to endodermal derivatives of the urogenital tract.
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