The Wilms' tumour suppressor gene Wt1 is a key regulator of embryonic development and tissue homeostasis. In humans, mutation in the gene may lead to childhood kidney cancer, severe glomerular kidney diseases, gonadal dysgenesis and, in rare cases, heart diseases. The importance of WT1 in embryonic development is related to its crucial function in the regulation of two cellular plasticity processes: the epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT) and the reverse process, the mesenchymal to epithelial transition (MET). WT1 expression persists during the waves of EMT and MET that generate certain mesodermal tissues. In fact, WT1 is a major regulator of both transitions and it is essential for the survival of mesenchyme progenitors. Furthermore, it has been proposed that WT1 is required for the derivation of progenitors from different mesothelia, possibly through an EMT. Progenitors expressing WT1 are believed to differentiate into different cell types, giving rise to coronary vasculature, adipocytes and hepatic stellate cells. In my PhD I aimed to investigate the instructive role of different WT1 isoforms. To address this, the first goal was to generate a single plasmid that would accommodate all necessary components of an inducible system, in order to derive cellular models for the inducible expression of WT1 single isoforms. Second, I aimed to understand the processes that the single variants were sufficient to drive. Therefore, I started with the establishment of two cellular models for the inducible expression of the main four isoforms of WT1 (with or without the exon 5 and/or the KTS, here referred as +/+, +/-, -/+ and -/-). I cloned different plasmids carrying doxycycline inducible WT1 isoforms and derived single stable clones in two epithelial kidney cell lines that do not express WT1: the MDCK and the IMCD3 cells. I then analysed the expression profiles of the clones, using either microarray or RNA sequencing, and performed cellular assays to characterize the cells after WT1 induction. Overall, WT1 induction did not affect cell growth, cell cycle, cell migration or anchorage independent growth, suggesting that the expression of WT1 in these two cell lines does not change their oncogenic potential. The expression analysis of the MDCK cells suggested that the induction of WT1 isoforms activates an inflammatory response, leading to the overexpression of several cytokines. Moreover, the -/+ isoform speciffically caused the upregulation of fibrotic markers and the rearrangement of the actin cytoskeleton. Interestingly, the expression of the mesothelial marker UPK3B increased following the induction of the -/+ isoform. Because the expression of the -/+ variant led to the most signifficant isoform-specific changes in both cell lines, I focused on this isoform for the validation of the transcriptomic data of the IMCD3 cells. I confirmed that the induction of WT1 -/+ in the IMCD3 cells leads to the upregulation of fibrotic markers, increases cell adhesion and activates the AKT and MAPK pathways. Moreover, there was a significant overexpression of different mesothelial markers and, importantly, of key regulators and markers of developmental processes, such as adipogenesis, skeletal and cartilage development, as well as angiogenesis. I then dissected the timing of expression of some specific markers and regulators, analysing the levels of the genes at different time points after WT1 -/+ induction. The preliminary results intimate that WT1 -/+ might induce epithelial cells in the direction of cartilage-skeletal tissue and fat, possibly through a mesothelial intermediate. The data also suggest that the induction of this isoform initiates an EMT, possibly followed by an MET, as the levels of expression of the differentiation markers and regulators increase. To validate the proposed instructive role of WT1, it will be of crucial importance to determine both RNA and protein levels of markers and regulators at even later time points, both in IMCD3 cells and in a model of inducible embryonic stem cells, which is currently under development. In the future, it will be important to address the relevance of these findings in vivo and to dissect the molecular mechanisms.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:721237 |
Date | January 2016 |
Creators | Petrovich, Giulia |
Contributors | Hastie, Nick |
Publisher | University of Edinburgh |
Source Sets | Ethos UK |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Electronic Thesis or Dissertation |
Source | http://hdl.handle.net/1842/23423 |
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