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    J Cell Physiol. 2006 Jan;206(1):103-11.

    EEDA: a protein associated with an early stage of stratified epithelial differentiation.

    Source

    Department of Dermatology, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.

    Abstract

    Using suppressive subtractive hybridization, we have identified a novel gene, which we named early epithelial differentiation associated (EEDA), which is uniquely associated with an early stage of stratified epithelial differentiation. In epidermis, esophageal epithelium, and tongue epithelium, EEDA mRNA, and antigen was abundant in suprabasal cells, but was barely detectable in more differentiated cells. Consistent with the limbal location of corneal epithelial stem cells, EEDA was expressed in basal corneal epithelial cells that are out of the stem cell compartment, as well as the suprabasal corneal epithelial cells. The strongest EEDA expression occurred in suprabasal precortical cells of mouse, bovine, and human anagen follicles. Developmental studies showed that the appearance of EEDA in embryonic mouse epidermis (E 15.5) coincided with morphological keratinization. Interestingly, EEDA expression is turned off when epithelia were perturbed by wounding and by cultivation under both low and high Ca2+ conditions. Our results indicate that EEDA is involved in the early stages of normal epithelial differentiation, and that EEDA is important for the "normal" differentiation pathway in a wide range of stratified epithelia.

    Copyright 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

    PMID:
    15920738
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
    PMCID:
    PMC1523255
    Free PMC Article

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