Kristijan Jezernik
University of Ljubljana
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Featured researches published by Kristijan Jezernik.
Cell and Tissue Research | 2005
Rok Romih; Peter Korošec; W. Mello; Kristijan Jezernik
Uroplakins, cytokeratins and the apical plasma membrane were studied in the epithelia of mouse urinary tract. In the simple epithelium covering the inner medulla of the renal pelvis, no uroplakins or cytokeratin 20 were detected and cells had microvilli on their apical surface. The epithelium covering the inner band of the outer medulla became pseudostratified, with the upper layer consisting of large cells with stalks connecting them to the basal lamina. Uroplakins and cytokeratin 20 were not expressed in these cells. However, some superficial cells appeared without connections to the basal lamina; these cells expressed uroplakins Ia, Ib, II and III and cytokeratin 20, they contained sparse small uroplakin-positive cytoplasmic vesicles and their apical surface showed both microvilli and ridges. Cytokeratin 20 was seen as dots in the cytoplasm. This epithelium therefore showed partial urothelial differentiation. The epithelium covering the outer band of the outer medulla gradually changed from a two-layered to a three-layered urothelium with typical umbrella cells that contained all four uroplakins. Cytokeratin 20 was organized into a complex network. The epithelium possessed an asymmetric unit membrane at the apical cell surface and fusiform vesicles. Umbrella cells were also observed in the ureter and urinary bladder. In males and females, the urothelium ended in the bladder neck and was continued by a non-keratinized stratified epithelium in the urethra in which no urothelial cell differentiation markers were detected. We thus show here the expression, distribution and organization of specific proteins associated with the various cell types in the urinary tract epithelium.
European Journal of Cell Biology | 2004
Peter Veranič; Rok Romih; Kristijan Jezernik
Cytokeratins, uroplakins and the asymmetric unit membrane are biochemical and morphological markers of urothelial differentiation. The aim of our study was to follow the synthesis, subcellular distribution and supramolecular organization of differentiation markers, cytokeratins and uroplakins, during differentiation of umbrella cells of mouse bladder urothelium. Regenerating urothelium after destruction with cyclophosphamide was used to simulate de-novo differentiation of cells, which was followed from day 1 to day 14 after cyclophosphamide injection. Cytokeratin 7 and uroplakins co-localized in the subapical cytoplasm of superficial cells from the early stage of differentiation on. At early stages of superficial cell differentiation cytokeratin 7 was filamentary organized, and rare uroplakins were found on the membranes of relatively small cytoplasmic vesicles, which were grouped in clusters under the apical membrane. Later, cytokeratin 7 gradually reorganized into a continuous trajectorial network, and uroplakins became organized into plaques of asymmetric unit membrane, which formed fusiform vesicles. After insertion of fusiform vesicles into the apical plasma membrane, the surface acquired microridged appearance of umbrella cells. Cytokeratin 20 appeared as the last differentiation marker of umbrella cells. Cytokeratin 20 was incorporated into the pre-existing trajectorial cytokeratin network. These results indicate that differentiation of urothelial cells starts with the synthesis of differentiation-related proteins i.e., cytokeratins and uroplakins, and later with their specific organization. We consider that the umbrella cell has reached its final stage of differentiation when uroplakins form plaques of asymmetric unit membrane that are inserted into the apical plasma membrane and when cytokeratin 20 becomes included in a trajectorial cytokeratin network in the subapical area of cytoplasm.
Histochemistry and Cell Biology | 2005
Mateja Erdani Kreft; Maksimiljan Sterle; Peter Veranič; Kristijan Jezernik
Using primary explant cultures of mouse bladder, the early response of the urothelium after superficial and full-thickness injuries was investigated. In such an in vitro wound healing model, explant surfaces with a mostly desquamated urothelial superficial layer represented superficial wounds, and the exposed lamina propria at the cut edges of the explants represented full-thickness wounds. The urothelial cell ultrastructure, the expression and subcellular distribution of the tight junctional protein occludin, and differentiation-related proteins CK 20, uroplakins, and actin were followed. Since singular terminally differentiated superficial cells remained on the urothelium after superficial injury (i.e., original superficial cells), we sought to determine their role during the urothelial wound-healing process. Ultrastructural and immunocytochemical studies have revealed that restored tight junctions are the earliest cellular event during the urothelial superficial and full-thickness wound-healing process. Occludin-containing tight junctions are developed before the new superficial cells are terminally differentiated. New insights into the urothelium wound-healing process were provided by demonstrating that the original superficial cells contribute to the urothelium wound healing by developing tight junctions with de novo differentiated superficial cells and by stretching, thus providing a large urothelial surface with asymmetric unit membrane plaques.
Histochemistry and Cell Biology | 1998
Rok Romih; Kristijan Jezernik; Andrej Mašera
Abstract A sodium saccharin (NaSac) diet was used to induce cell damage and regeneration in the urothelium of the male rat urinary bladder. Foci of terminally differentiated superficial cell exfoliation were detected after 5 weeks and their number increased after 10 and 15 weeks of the diet. At the sites of superficial cell loss, regenerative simple hyperplasia developed. Within 5 weeks of NaSac removal, regeneration re-established normal differentiated urothelium. In order to follow urothelial differentiation during regeneration we studied the expression of uroplakins and cytokeratins by means of immunocytochemistry and immunohistochemistry, respectively. Normal urothelium was characterised by terminally differentiated superficial cells which expressed uroplakins in their luminal plasma membrane and cytokeratin 20 (CK20) in the cytoplasm. Basal and intermediate cells were CK20 negative and cytokeratin 17 (CK17) positive. In hyperplastic urothelium all cells synthesised CK17, but not CK20. Differentiation of the superficial layer was reflected in three successive cell types: cells with microvilli, cells with rounded microridges and those with a rigid-looking plasma membrane on the luminal surface. The cells with microvilli did not stain with anti-uroplakin antibody. When the synthesis of uroplakins was detected rounded microridges were formed. With the elevated expression of uroplakins the luminal plasma membrane becomes rigid-looking which is characteristic of asymmetric unit membrane of terminally differentiated cells. During differentiation, syn-thesis of CK17 ceased in superficial cells while the synthesis of CK20 started. These results indicate that during urothelial regeneration after NaSac treatment, specific superficial cell types develop in which the switch to uroplakin synthesis and transition from CK17 to CK20 synthesis are crucial events for terminal differentiation.
Cell Biology International | 2001
Rok Romih; Daša Koprivec; Draga Stiblar Martincic; Kristijan Jezernik
Processes leading to the recovery of a normal three‐layered urothelium from a hyperplastic urothelium induced by cyclophosphamide (CP) treatment in rats have been investigated. A single intraperitoneal (ip) dose of CP caused extensive loss of cells from urothelium, but the remaining cells started to express epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) in their plasma membranes. On day 2 after CP injection, proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) immunohistochemistry showed a rapid increase in positively stained nuclei, from which a hyperplastic urothelium developed, composed of undifferentiated cells expressing EGFR over the entire plasma membrane. Subsequently, EGFR gradually disappeared from the apical plasma membrane but remained in the basolateral membranes. After day 6, PCNA‐positive nuclei in all cell layers decreased, except in basal cells. Apoptotic cells were detectable by the TUNEL assay at day 2, and increased in number in all layers of the hyperplastic urothelium until day 10, returning to the control levels by day 14. Electron microscopic evidence showed that apoptotic cells were either pinched off into the bladder lumen or phagocytosed by the neighbouring urothelial cells. Thus, the urothelium responds to the damage by intense proliferation for a week, resulting in an undifferentiated hyperplastic state. Differentiation of superficial cells then begins and damaged cells are gradually removed by apoptosis until the three‐layered urothelium is fully restored by two weeks following CP treatment.
Protoplasma | 2010
Mateja Erdani Kreft; Samo Hudoklin; Kristijan Jezernik; Rok Romih
Blood–urine barrier, which is formed during differentiation of superficial urothelial cells, is the tightest and most impermeable barrier in the body. In the urinary bladder, the barrier must accommodate large changes in the surface area during distensions and contractions of the organ. Tight junctions and unique apical plasma membrane of superficial urothelial cells play a critical role in the barrier maintenance. Alterations in the blood–urine barrier function accompany most of the urinary tract diseases. In this review, we discuss recent discoveries on the role of tight junctions, dynamics of Golgi apparatus and post-Golgi compartments, and intracellular membrane traffic during the biogenesis and maintenance of blood–urine barrier.
Differentiation | 2009
Mateja Erdani Kreft; Rok Romih; Marko Kreft; Kristijan Jezernik
The composition of the apical plasma membrane of bladder superficial urothelial cells is dramatically modified during cell differentiation, which is accompanied by the change in the dynamics of endocytosis. We studied the expression of urothelial differentiation-related proteins uroplakins and consequently the apical plasma membrane molecular composition in relation to the membrane-bound and fluid-phase endocytosis in bladder superficial urothelial cells. By using primary urothelial cultures in the environment without mechanical stimuli, we studied the constitutive endocytosis. Four new findings emerge from our study. First, in highly differentiated superficial urothelial cells with strong uroplakin expression, the endocytosis of fluid-phase endocytotic markers was 43% lower and the endocytosis of membrane-bound markers was 86% lower compared to partially differentiated cells with weak uroplakin expression. Second, superficial urothelial cells have 5-15-times lower endocytotic activity than MDCK cells. Third, in superficial urothelial cells the membrane-bound markers are delivered to lysosomes, while fluid-phase markers are seen only in early endocytotic compartments, suggesting their kiss-and-run recycling. Finally, we provide the first evidence that in highly differentiated cells the uroplakin-positive membrane regions are excluded from internalization, suggesting that uroplakins hinder endocytosis from the apical plasma membrane in superficial urothelial cells and thus maintain optimal permeability barrier function.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2009
Mateja Erdani Kreft; Kristijan Jezernik; Marko Kreft; Rok Romih
Superficial urothelial cells that line the urinary bladder accommodate cyclical changes in organ volume while maintaining a permeability barrier between urine and tissue fluids. The specific apical plasma membrane traffic is necessary for their proper function. The composition of the apical plasma membrane is dramatically modified during differentiation of bladder urothelial cells, most notably by assembly of urothelial plaques containing uroplakins. However, the assembly of uroplakins into plaques, their insertion and removal from the apical surface, and the regulation of these processes are still poorly understood. This review examines the traffic (exocytosis/endocytosis) of the apical plasma membrane during differentiation of urothelial cells and focuses on the physiological and clinical significance of the apical plasma membrane traffic in bladder superficial urothelial cells.
Biology of the Cell | 2000
Peter Veranič; Kristijan Jezernik
Summary— During desquamation, the cells of mouse urinary bladder epithelium undergo detachment. In this process we examined the disconnection of cell adhesion molecules. Two proteins of cell junctions were studied: ZO1 of tight junctions and desmoplakin of desmosomes. Desquamation was induced by intravesical injection of LPS, constant illumination of mouse for 96 h, application of a combination of stress hormones hydrocortisone and norepinephrine or by removal of calcium with EGTA. All the inducers caused penetration of lanthanum tracer through the tight junctions, indicating paracellular permeability. Dilatation of extracellular spaces between neighboring cells was seen whenever desquamation was induced in bladders containing urine. Desquamation of single cells as well as groups of cells was observed. Contrary to obvious disconnection of cell junctions, as a precondition for desquamation, the distribution of junctional proteins did not change either in urothelial tissue or in desquamated cells. This study demonstrates that all the inducers of desquamation cause first an extensive dysfunction of a blood urine barrier and after that an occasional mechanical disconnection of adhesive junctions which consequently leads to desquamation.
Cell Biology International | 2003
Kristijan Jezernik; Rok Romih; Hans Georg Mannherz; Daša Koprivec
The present study was conducted to investigate cell death, proliferation and inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) immunoreactivity in rat urothelium within 24 h after a single intraperitoneal dose of cyclophosphamide (CP). Necrotic cells were identified predominantly in the superficial cell layer from 1 h until 6 h after CP injection, most of them desquamating from the urothelium into the lumen of the urinary bladder. Active caspase‐3 immunohistochemistry revealed apoptotic cells from 12 h until 24 h after CP injection. The apoptotic index reached a peak at 18 h and then rapidly dropped. Simultaneously with the decrease of apoptosis, the proliferation index increased from 18 h until 24 h after CP treatment. Immunoreaction to iNOS was first detected at 6 h in basal and intermediate cells. Later, iNOS immunoreactivity became stronger and was present in all cell layers. Our results suggest that the destruction of rat urothelium during 24 h after CP administration is due not only to necrosis, but also to apoptosis. The first 6 h are characterised by necrotic changes and no iNOS immunoreactivity. Thereafter, apoptosis and iNOS immunoreactivity are observed within the damaged urothelium. At 24 h after CP injection, iNOS immunoreactivity is still present, but proliferation prevails over cell death, enabling the urothelium to start regeneration.