» Articles » PMID: 15922574

Differential Expression of P63 Isoforms in Female Reproductive Organs

Overview
Journal Mech Dev
Publisher Elsevier
Date 2005 Jun 1
PMID 15922574
Citations 64
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

p63 is the identity switch for uterine/vaginal epithelial cell fate, and disruption of p63 expression by diethylstilbestrol (DES) induces cervical/vaginal adenosis in mice. In this article, we report the expression patterns of p63 isoforms (TA, DeltaN, alpha, beta and gamma) in mice, focusing on the reproductive tract. We also present the reproductive tract phenotype of female p63-/- mice. Finally, to better evaluate the potential role of p63 in human development of DES-induced cervical/vaginal adenosis, we describe the ontogeny of p63 in human female fetuses. In adult mice, the DeltaN isoforms of p63 were expressed only in squamous/basal/myoepithelial cells of epithelial tissues, while TA isoforms of p63 were highly expressed in germ cells of the ovary and testis. In fetal mice, the DeltaN and alpha forms of p63 were expressed in the cloacal and urogenital sinus epithelia. In the female p63-/- mice, the sinus vagina developed, but p63-/- sinus vaginal epithelium failed to undergo squamous differentiation confirming an essential role of p63 in squamous epithelial differentiation. Although TAp63 was highly expressed in developing primordial germ cells/oocytes, p63-/- ovaries and oocytes developed normally. The ontogeny of p63 in female reproductive organs was essentially identical in mouse and human. In the human fetus at the susceptible stage for DES-induced cervical/vaginal adenosis, most cervical/vaginal epithelial cells were columnar and negative for p63. Therefore, inhibition of p63 expression by DES should change the cell fate of human Müllerian duct epithelial cells and cause cervical/vaginal adenosis as previously demonstrated in mouse.

Citing Articles

Decoding Müllerian Duct Epithelial Regionalization.

Jia S, Zhao F Mol Reprod Dev. 2025; 92(2):e70018.

PMID: 39994938 PMC: 11850963. DOI: 10.1002/mrd.70018.


Uterine organoids reveal insights into epithelial specification and plasticity in development and disease.

Rizo J, Ahmad V, Pru J, Winuthayanon S, Challa S, Kim T Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2025; 122(5):e2422694122.

PMID: 39883834 PMC: 11804710. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2422694122.


Oocyte death is triggered by the stabilization of TAp63α dimers in response to cisplatin.

Abazarikia A, So W, Xiao S, Kim S Cell Death Dis. 2024; 15(11):799.

PMID: 39511162 PMC: 11544165. DOI: 10.1038/s41419-024-07202-7.


An overview of different methods to establish a murine premature ovarian failure model.

Pouladvand N, Azarnia M, Zeinali H, Fathi R, Tavana S Animal Model Exp Med. 2024; 7(6):835-852.

PMID: 39219374 PMC: 11680483. DOI: 10.1002/ame2.12477.


Molecular Mechanisms Determining Mammalian Oocyte Quality with the Treatment of Cancer Therapy.

Dong R, Abazarikia A, Luan Y, Yu S, Kim S Adv Anat Embryol Cell Biol. 2024; 238:97-119.

PMID: 39030356 DOI: 10.1007/978-3-031-55163-5_5.