The uroplakins (UPs) are a family of proteins which associate with each other and form plaques on the apical surface of the urothelium. These plaques contribute to a permeability barrier, preventing the influx of urine from the urinary tract lumen. Urinary tract malformations associated with human and mouse UP mutations, the human fetal expression patterns of UPs and experiments in Xenopus oocytes are collectively revealing new functions for the UPs, forcing us to view these proteins in a new light. Rather than simply being products of the urothelial differentiation program, they may be a group of proteins central to the process of urinary tract differentiation itself. © 2007 International Society of Nephrology.
CITATION STYLE
Jenkins, D., & Woolf, A. S. (2007, February). Uroplakins: New molecular players in the biology of urinary tract malformations. Kidney International. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.ki.5002053
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