Abstract
It has been suggested that a family of tissue remodelling enzymes called matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) play a causal role in the process of tail resorption during thyroid hormone-induced metamorphosis of the anuran tadpole; however, this hypothesis has never been directly substantiated. We cloned two new Xenopus MMPs, gelatinase A (MMP-2) and MT3-MMP (MMP-16), and the MMP inhibitor TIMP-2. These clones were used along with several others to perform a comprehensive expression study. We show that all MMPs and TIMP-2 are dramatically induced in the resorbing tail during spontaneous metamorphosis and are spatially coexpressed, primarily in the remodelling mesenchymal tissues. By Northern blotting, we show that all the examined MMPs/TIMP-2 are also induced by treatment of organ-cultured tails with thyroid hormone (T3). Using the organ culture model, we provide the first direct evidence that MMPs are required for T3-induced tail resorption by showing that a synthetic inhibitor of MMP activity/expression can specifically retard the resorption process. By gelatin zymography, we also show T3 induction of a fifth MMP, preliminarily identified as gelatinase B (GelB; MMP-9). Moreover, T3 not only induces MMP/TIMP expression but also MMP activation, and we provide evidence that TIMP-2 participates in the latter process. These findings suggest that MMPs and TIMPs act in concert to effect the dismantling of mesenchymal structures during T3-induced metamorphic tadpole tail resorption. © 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Jung, J. C., Leco, K. J., Edwards, D. R., & Fini, M. E. (2002). Matrix metalloproteinases mediate the dismantling of mesenchymal structures in the tadpole tail during thyroid hormone-induced tail resorption. Developmental Dynamics, 223(3), 402–413. https://doi.org/10.1002/dvdy.10069
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.