Sabela Da Silva Álvarez, Olaya Lamas González, Alba Ferreirós López, Patricia González, María Gómez, Tomás García-Caballero Parada, Miguel González Barcia, Miguel Angel García González, Manuel Collado Rodríguez
Programmed cell senescence during embryo development is a recently described process that opens a new perspective to understand the senescence response and that adds a new player whose contribution to development needs to be addressed. Identifying developmental syndromes with a root in deregulated programmed cell senescence will undoubtedly reinforce our view of senescence and could provide a new angle to confront disease. One of the structures that was initially reported to undergo cellular senescence is the mesonephros. During E12.5-E14.5, before regression, mesonephric tubules are positive for the most widely used marker of cell senescence, SAbG, and negative for proliferation marker, Ki67, in a p21Cip1-dependent manner. PKD2 is one of the genes defective in autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD). Inherited mutations in this gene result in cyst formation in adults after a secondary hit. Polycystin-2 (PC2) protein, the product of PKD2 gene expression, inhibits cell cycle progression by inducing p21Cip1, whereas mutated PKD2 results in increased proliferation and defective differentiation of kidney epithelial cells. Here, we addressed the possibility of defective programmed cell senescence as a consequence of Pkd2 deletion in mice. We analyzed embryos for the expression of the senescence marker SAbG, for the proliferative status of mesonephric tubule cells, and for the expression of p21Cip1, without identifying any noticeable deregulation of cell senescence. Our results exclude defective programmed cell senescence upon Pkd2 ablation as an initial event in ADPKD.
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