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Hox11 genes regulate postnatal longitudinal bone growth and growth plate proliferation

Authors :
Ernestina Schipani
Deneen M. Wellik
Kyriel M. Pineault
Kayla N. Garthus
Kenneth M. Kozloff
Qing Yao
Ilea T. Swinehart
Edward Ho
Source :
Biology Open, Biology Open, Vol 4, Iss 11, Pp 1538-1548 (2015)
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Company of Biologists, 2015.

Abstract

Hox genes are critical regulators of skeletal development and Hox9-13 paralogs, specifically, are necessary for appendicular development along the proximal to distal axis. Loss of function of both Hoxa11 and Hoxd11 results in severe malformation of the forelimb zeugopod. In the radius and ulna of these mutants, chondrocyte development is perturbed, growth plates are not established, and skeletal growth and maturation fails. In compound mutants in which one of the four Hox11 alleles remains wild-type, establishment of a growth plate is preserved and embryos develop normally through newborn stages, however, skeletal phenotypes become evident postnatally. During postnatal development, the radial and ulnar growth rate slows compared to wild-type controls and terminal bone length is reduced. Growth plate height is decreased in mutants and premature growth plate senescence occurs along with abnormally high levels of chondrocyte proliferation in the reserve and proliferative zones. Compound mutants additionally develop an abnormal curvature of the radius, which causes significant distortion of the carpal elements. The progressive bowing of the radius appears to result from physical constraint caused by the disproportionately slower growth of the ulna than the radius. Collectively, these data are consistent with premature depletion of forelimb zeugopod progenitor cells in the growth plate of Hox11 compound mutants, and demonstrate a continued function for Hox genes in postnatal bone growth and patterning.<br />Summary: Hox genes are required for postnatal skeletal growth. Hox11 genes function in the zeugopod skeletal elements and regulate longitudinal growth through controlling chondrocyte maturation within the growth plate.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biology Open, Biology Open, Vol 4, Iss 11, Pp 1538-1548 (2015)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e4c183412481ad103f176b9fe6a7bcfe