Polycystin expression during embryonic development of human kidney in adult tissues and ADPKD tissue

BS Weston, S Jeffery, I Jeffrey, SFA Sharaf… - The Histochemical …, 1997 - Springer
BS Weston, S Jeffery, I Jeffrey, SFA Sharaf, N Carter, A Saggar-Malik, RG Price
The Histochemical Journal, 1997Springer
Normal renal tissue, ranging from 8 weeks' gestation to full term to adult, was probed with
polyclonal antibodies raised to peptide epitopes within the translated PKD1 gene sequence.
Three antibodies were studied, all of which gave similar results. Renal tissue from patients
with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) and samples from normal
adult liver, heart, brain, skeletal muscle and lymph node were also studied. Tissue staining
demonstrated that the pattern of polycystin expression changed with gestational age in …
Abstract
Normal renal tissue, ranging from 8 weeks' gestation to full term to adult, was probed with polyclonal antibodies raised to peptide epitopes within the translated PKD1 gene sequence. Three antibodies were studied, all of which gave similar results. Renal tissue from patients with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) and samples from normal adult liver, heart, brain, skeletal muscle and lymph node were also studied. Tissue staining demonstrated that the pattern of polycystin expression changed with gestational age in normal kidney. Whereas the precursors to the renal excretory unit were stained at 12 weeks, and the proximal and distal convoluted tubules stained to differing degrees through out development, the glomeruli were poorly stained until full term and also in the adult. Extrarenal tissue stained in both adult and juvenile samples, with the exception of lymph node, which remained unstained. The intensity of polycystin staining increased in ADPKD renal tissue. The widespread distribution of polycystin was consistent with the systemic nature of ADPKD and the role of epithelial cells in the disease
Springer