3.9 Article

Stage-dependent function of Wnt5a during male external genitalia development

Journal

CONGENITAL ANOMALIES
Volume 61, Issue 6, Pages 212-219

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cga.12438

Keywords

cell migration; cell proliferation; external genitalia; urethral tube formation; Wnt5a

Categories

Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [17H06432, 18H02474, 18K06837, 18K06938]
  2. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology
  3. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [18H02474, 18K06837, 17H06432, 18K06938] Funding Source: KAKEN

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External genitalia development in mice involves multiple processes regulated by signaling pathways, with Wnt5a playing a crucial role in both urethral tube formation and external genitalia outgrowth. Loss of Wnt5a disrupts cell polarity, leading to reduced cell proliferation and severe urethral defects, indicating its importance in coordinated cell migration during male external genitalia development.
External genitalia development in mice involves multiple developmental processes under the regulation of various signaling pathways. Wnt5a, one of the major Wnt ligands, is a crucial developmental regulator of outgrowing organs such as the limb, the mandible, and the external genitalia. Defects in Wnt5a signaling have been linked to Robinow syndrome, a genetic disorder in which male patients manifest a micropenis and defective urethral tube formation. Whereas Wnt5a is required for cell proliferation during embryonic external genitalia outgrowth, its role for urethral tube formation has yet to be understood. Here, we show that Wnt5a contributes to urethral tube formation as well as external genitalia outgrowth. Wnt5a is expressed in the embryonic external genitalia mesenchyme, and mesenchymal-specific conditional Wnt5a knockout mice resulted in hypospadias-like urethral defects. Early deletion of Wnt5a at E10.5 showed severe defects in both external genitalia outgrowth and urethral tube formation, along with reduced cell proliferation. The severe urethral tube defect persisted during later timing deletion of Wnt5a (E13.5). Further analyses revealed that loss of Wnt5a disrupted cell polarity and led to a reduction of the phosphorylated myosin light chain and the focal adhesion protein, vinculin. Altogether, these results suggest that Wnt5a coordinates cell proliferation and directed cell migration in a stage-dependent manner during male external genitalia development. Furthermore, Wnt5a may regulate cell polarity, focal adhesion formation, and cell contractility, leading to directed cell migration during male-type urethral formation in a manner that has not been reported in other organ fusion events.

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