Abstract

Mammals are able to rapidly produce red blood cells in response to stress. The molecular pathways used in this process are important in understanding responses to anaemia in multiple biological settings. Here we characterise the novel gene Claudin 13 (Cldn13), a member of the Claudin family of tight junction proteins using RNA expression, microarray and phylogenetic analysis. We present evidence that Cldn13 appears to be co-ordinately regulated as part of a stress induced erythropoiesis pathway and is a mouse-specific gene mainly expressed in tissues associated with haematopoietic function. CLDN13 phylogenetically groups with its genomic neighbour CLDN4, a conserved tight junction protein with a putative role in epithelial to mesenchymal transition, suggesting a recent duplication event. Mechanisms of mammalian stress erythropoiesis are of importance in anaemic responses and expression microarray analyses demonstrate that Cldn13 is the most abundant Claudin in spleen from mice infected with Trypanosoma congolense. In mice prone to anaemia (C57BL/6), its expression is reduced compared to strains which display a less severe anaemic response (A/J and BALB/c) and is differentially regulated in spleen during disease progression. Genes clustering with Cldn13 on microarrays are key regulators of erythropoiesis (Tal1, Trim10, E2f2), erythrocyte membrane proteins (Rhd and Gypa), associated with red cell volume (Tmcc2) and indirectly associated with erythropoietic pathways (Cdca8, Cdkn2d, Cenpk). Relationships between genes appearing co-ordinately regulated with Cldn13 post-infection suggest new insights into the molecular regulation and pathways involved in stress induced erythropoiesis and suggest a novel, previously unreported role for claudins in correct cell polarisation and protein partitioning prior to erythroblast enucleation.

Highlights

  • The Claudins are a family of more than 23 small (20–27 kDa) tetraspan transmembrane proteins[1] which, alongside occludin, are the major components of tight junction (TJ) filaments in epithelial and endothelial cells

  • Claudin 13 (Cldn13) spans a genomic region of 1277 bp and is located 29579 bp centromeric to Cldn4 (Fig. 1)

  • Phylogenetic analysis As Cldn13 appears to be mouse specific, we explored its phylogenetic relationship with other Claudin family members

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Summary

Introduction

The Claudins are a family of more than 23 small (20–27 kDa) tetraspan transmembrane proteins[1] which, alongside occludin, are the major components of tight junction (TJ) filaments in epithelial and endothelial cells. TJ proteins play critical roles in cellular proliferation and neoplastic pathways by linking extracellular proteins to intracellular signalling pathways and the cytoskeleton [3,4,5]. The activity of members of the Claudin family (Claudins 1, 2, 3, 4 and 7) is influenced by the transcription factors SNAI1 and 2 [8,9,10], which are key regulators of epithelial mesenchymal transition, and various kinases including protein kinase A (PKA) and protein kinase C (PKC) [11]. In the case of Claudins 1 and 2, their regulation by SNAI1 is downstream of TGFb signalling mediated by the PI3K and MEK pathways [9]

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