Identification of the renal erythropoietin-producing cells using transgenic mice

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Abstract

Regulation of erythropoietin production by the kidneys is central to the control of erythropoiesis. Uncertainty about the identity of the renal cells involved has been a major obstacle to understanding this mechanism. We have used sequence from the mouse erythropoietin locus to direct expression of a marker gene, SV40 T antigen, to these cells in transgenic mice. The transgenic constructs contained an oligonucleotide marker (Epo-M) or SV40 sequence (Epo-TAg) in the 5′ untranslated region of the mouse erythropoietin gene, flanked on each side by 9 and 7.5 kb of DNA from the mouse erythropoietin locus. Anemia-inducible expression of Epo-M and Epo-TAg was observed in the kidney. In one of thirteen lines, homologous integration of Epo-TAg into the mouse erythropoietin locus occurred. In transgenic mice bearing Epo-TAg at homologous and heterologous insertion sites, renal expression was restricted to a population of cells in the interstitium of the cortex and outer medulla. Immunohistochemical characterization by light and electron microscopy shows that these are the fibroblast-like type I interstitial cells.

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Maxwell, P. H., Osmond, M. K., Pugh, C. W., Heryet, A., Nicholls, L. G., Tan, C. C., … Ratcliffe, P. J. (1993). Identification of the renal erythropoietin-producing cells using transgenic mice. Kidney International, 44(5), 1149–1162. https://doi.org/10.1038/ki.1993.362

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