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Essential Roles of Retinoic Acid Signaling in Interdigital Apoptosis and Control of BMP-7 Expression in Mouse Autopods
- Source :
- Developmental Biology. 208(1):30-43
- Publication Year :
- 1999
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 1999.
-
Abstract
- We previously reported that mice lacking the RARgamma gene and one or both alleles of the RARbeta gene (i.e., RARbeta+/-/RARgamma-/- and RARbeta-/-/RARgamma-/- mutants) display a severe and fully penetrant interdigital webbing (soft tissue syndactyly), caused by the persistence of the fetal interdigital mesenchyme (Ghyselinck et al., 1997, Int. J. Dev. Biol. 41, 425-447). In the present study, these compound mutants were used to investigate the cellular and molecular mechanisms involved in retinoic acid (RA)-dependent formation of the interdigital necrotic zones (INZs). The mutant INZs show a marked decrease in the number of apoptotic cells accompanied by an increase of cell proliferation. This marked decrease was not paralleled by a reduction of the number of macrophages, indicating that the chemotactic cues which normally attract these cells into the INZs were not affected. The expression of a number of genes known to be involved in the establishment of the INZs, the patterning of the autopod, and/or the initiation of apoptosis was also unaffected. These genes included BMP-2, BMP-4, Msx-1, Msx-2, 5' members of Hox complexes, Bcl2, Bax, and p53. In contrast, the mutant INZs displayed a specific, graded, down-regulation of tissue transglutaminase (tTG) promoter activity and of stromelysin-3 expression upon the removal of one or both alleles of the RARbeta gene from the RARgamma null genetic background. As retinoic acid response elements are present in the promoter regions of both tTG and stromelysin-3 genes, we propose that RA might increase the amount of cell death in the INZs through a direct modulation of tTG expression and that it also contributes to the process of tissue remodeling, which accompanies cell death, through an up-regulation of stromelysin-3 expression in the INZs. Approximately 10% of the RARbeta-/- /RARgamma-/- mutants displayed a supernumerary preaxial digit on hindfeet, which is also a feature of the BMP-7 null phenotype (Dudley et al., 1995, Genes Dev. 9, 2795-2807; Luo et al., 1995, Genes Dev. 9, 2808-2820). BMP-7 was globally down-regulated at an early stage in the autopods of these RAR double null mutants, prior to the appearance of the digital rays. Therefore, RA may exert some of its effects on anteroposterior autopod patterning through controlling BMP-7 expression.
- Subjects :
- Programmed cell death
Receptors, Retinoic Acid
Tissue transglutaminase
Bone Morphogenetic Protein 7
Mutant
Retinoic acid
Down-Regulation
Apoptosis
Mice, Transgenic
Tretinoin
tissue transglutaminase
Biology
Embryonic and Fetal Development
Mice
03 medical and health sciences
chemistry.chemical_compound
0302 clinical medicine
Matrix Metalloproteinase 11
Transforming Growth Factor beta
Forelimb
Animals
Limb development
Hox gene
Molecular Biology
030304 developmental biology
0303 health sciences
Transglutaminases
stromelysin-3, BMP-7
Macrophages
Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental
Metalloendopeptidases
Cell Biology
Interdigital webbing
Molecular biology
Retinoic acid receptor
chemistry
limb development
Bone Morphogenetic Proteins
Mutation
embryonic structures
biology.protein
retinoic acid receptors
Cell Division
030217 neurology & neurosurgery
Developmental Biology
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00121606
- Volume :
- 208
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Developmental Biology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....a78b2c8d9cadcf67f684cc65fa0bf408
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1006/dbio.1998.9176