Volume 52 (4): 541-544, 2004 Copyright ©The Histochemical Society, Inc.
Expression of the Homeobox Gene Barx2 in the Gut
Child Health Research Institute, Womens and Childrens Hospital (GRS,BCP), North Adelaide, South Australia, and Department of Paediatrics, University of Adelaide (BCP), Adelaide, South Australia Correspondence to: G. R. Sander, Child Health Research Institute, 72 King William Road, North Adelaide, South Australia 5006, Australia. E-mail: guy.sander{at}adelaide.edu.au
Barx2 is a member of the Bar class of homeobox genes and has been shown to regulate specific cell adhesion molecules, L1, Ng-CAM, N-CAM, and cadherin 6. By Northern blotting and in situ hybridization, we show that Barx2 is expressed throughout the gut and is located in epithelial cells of the proliferative and differentiative regions of the stomach, esophagus, and intestine. Barx2 was expressed in muscle cells of the muscularis externa and also showed a graded pattern of expression in intestinal enterocytes, decreasing in a crypt-to-villous direction. We speculate that Barx2 may regulate cell adhesion molecules in epithelial cells of the gut. (J Histochem Cytochem 52:541544, 2004)
Key Words: Barx homeobox L1 cell adhesion molecule cadherin
Barx2 is a member of the Bar class of homeobox genes that include BarHI and BarH2 from Drosophila (Higashijima et al. 1992
Barx2 has been shown to promote myogenic differentiation and to regulate the expression of muscle-specific genes (Herring et al. 2001 A 254-bp Barx2 3' coding fragment adjacent to the homeobox was amplified by PCR from adult rat genomic DNA and used to probe for Barx2 expression. This region shares minimal nucleotide sequence identity between Barx1 and Barx2 (33% for mouse Barx1 and Barx2 and 36% for human Barx1 and Barx2: GenBank accession nos. AF277160, L77900, AF213356 and AH008405, respectively), and under our stringent conditions the probe is specific for Barx2. The primers 5'-tgg aca gga agc acc cac aaa ac-3' (upper) and 5'-tag ctt aat ggt ggg ggt tcc gaa g-3' (lower) were designed to amplify the 3' end of Barx2 between the stop codon and the homeobox. The PCR fragment was cloned into pGEM-T easy vector (Barx2-3' coding), sequenced in both directions and identified as Barx2 by database sequence searches using ANGIS (Australian National Genomic Information Retrieval System). A magnesium concentration of 1.5 mM was used in the PCR with the following parameters: (a) one cycle at 94C (30 sec), 72C (30 sec); (b) while the PCR was held at 72C the TAQ polymerase was added; (c) 35 cycles of 94C (30 sec), 55C (1 min), 72C (1 min); and (d) a final extension step of 72C (7 min). This Barx2-3' coding fragment was used as a gene-specific probe for the Northern and ISH experiments.
Four-month-old female SpragueDawley rats were sacrificed and tissue segments from the stomach (fundic and body regions), esophagus (proximal and distal), duodenum, jejunum, ileum, cecum, and colon (proximal, middle, and distal for each) were removed, fixed, and processed for ISH (Powell and Rogers 1990
For Northern blotting analysis, total RNA was isolated from gut tissues and poly A(+) RNA prepared (Poly-A-Tract kit System IV; Promega, Madison, WI). Approximately 3-µg samples of poly A(+) RNA were fractionated in a 1% agarose formaldehyde gel, transferred to Zetaprobe GT membrane (Bio-Rad; Hercules, CA) and probed with the 254-bp Barx2-3' coding fragment labeled with [ We first detected Barx2 expression in the forestomach, the body compartment of the stomach, duodenum, ileum, jejunum, and colon by Northern blotting analysis (Figure 1). Expression was uniform in the proximal, middle, and distal subregions with the exception of the proximal colon, which showed reduced expression compared to the distal colon. Barx2 expression was elevated in the forestomach compared to the body compartment and may reflect the different anatomic variation between these two regions. We did not detect Barx2 expression in the cecum.
ISH analysis revealed that in the esophagus and forestomach Barx2 is expressed in the basal and suprabasal layers, which contain proliferating and differentiating cells, respectively (Figures 2A2F). In the stomach body compartment, Barx2 was expressed mainly in the region towards the bottom of the glands containing the basophilic chief cells and appeared to decrease towards the upper portion of the glands where the acidophilic parietal cells are located (Figures 2J2L). In the small and large intestine we found Barx2 expression to be strongest in the crypts and much reduced in the villous enterocytes (Figures 2M2ZA). We also detected diffuse Barx2 expression in cells in the muscularis externae in the gut (Figures 2H and 2N; and data not shown). These expression data provide morphological evidence that Barx2 is involved in intestinal muscle cell function and provide a link between previous in vitro experiments and whole-tissue analyses (Herring et al. 2001
Mounting evidence suggests that Barx2 regulates the cell adhesion molecules L1 and cadherin 6. L1 is a neural cell adhesion molecule whose promoter can be stimulated or repressed by Barx2, depending on the circumstances (Jones et al. 1997
We also detected Barx2 expression in two human colon adenocarcinoma cell lines, Caco-2 and HT-29, at a low level compared to expression in normal gut tissue. Recently, BARX2 expression levels have been found to positively correlate with cadherin 6 in ovarian surface epithelium and in ovarian cancer cell lines, and there is speculation that it is a suppressor of cancer progression (Sellar et al. 2001
Received for publication September 17, 2003; accepted December 31, 2003
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