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Abnormal urethra formation in mouse models of Split-hand/split-foot malformation type 1 and type 4
被引:0
|作者:
Kentaro Suzuki
Ryuma Haraguchi
Tsutomu Ogata
Ottavia Barbieri
Olinda Alegria
Maxence Vieux-Rochas
Naomi Nakagata
Masataka Ito
Alea A Mills
Takeshi Kurita
Giovanni Levi
Gen Yamada
机构:
[1] Center for Animal Resources and Development (CARD),Department of Endocrinology and Metabolism
[2] Graduate School of Medical and Pharmaceutical Sciences,Department of Experimental Medicine
[3] Kumamoto University,Department of Developmental Anatomy and Regenerative Biology
[4] National Research Institute for Child Health and Development,Division of Reproductive Biology Research
[5] University of Genova,undefined
[6] IST,undefined
[7] CNRS UMR5166–MNHN,undefined
[8] Evolution des Régulations Endocriniennes,undefined
[9] Paris,undefined
[10] National Defense Medical College,undefined
[11] Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory,undefined
[12] Northwestern University,undefined
来源:
关键词:
hypospadias;
split-hand/foot malformation;
dlx;
p63;
Bmp7;
urethra;
D O I:
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学科分类号:
摘要:
Urogenital birth defects are one of the common phenotypes observed in hereditary human disorders. In particular, limb malformations are often associated with urogenital developmental abnormalities, as the case for Hand–foot–genital syndrome displaying similar hypoplasia/agenesis of limbs and external genitalia. Split-hand/split-foot malformation (SHFM) is a syndromic limb disorder affecting the central rays of the autopod with median clefts of the hands and feet, missing central fingers and often fusion of the remaining ones. SHFM type 1 (SHFM1) is linked to genomic deletions or rearrangements, which includes the distal-less-related homeogenes DLX5 and DLX6 as well as DSS1. SHFM type 4 (SHFM4) is associated with mutations in p63, which encodes a p53-related transcription factor. To understand that SHFM is associated with urogenital birth defects, we performed gene expression analysis and gene knockout mouse model analyses. We show here that Dlx5, Dlx6, p63 and Bmp7, one of the p63 downstream candidate genes, are all expressed in the developing urethral plate (UP) and that targeted inactivation of these genes in the mouse results in UP defects leading to abnormal urethra formation. These results suggested that different set of transcription factors and growth factor genes play similar developmental functions during embryonic urethra formation. Human SHFM syndromes display multiple phenotypes with variations in addition to split hand foot limb phenotype. These results suggest that different genes associated with human SHFM could also be involved in the aetiogenesis of hypospadias pointing toward a common molecular origin of these congenital malformations.
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页码:36 / 44
页数:8
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