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Fibulin-2 is dispensable for mouse development and elastic fiber formation

Authors :
Sicot, Francois-Xavier
Tsuda, Takeshi
Markova, Dessislava
Klement, John
Arita, Machiko
Zhang, Rui-Zhu
Pan, Te-Cheng
Mecham, Robert P.
Birk, David E.
Chu, Mon-Li
Sicot, Francois-Xavier
Tsuda, Takeshi
Markova, Dessislava
Klement, John
Arita, Machiko
Zhang, Rui-Zhu
Pan, Te-Cheng
Mecham, Robert P.
Birk, David E.
Chu, Mon-Li
Source :
Department of Dermatology and Cutaneous Biology Faculty Papers
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

Fibulin-2 is an extracellular matrix protein belonging to the five-member fibulin family, of which two members have been shown to play essential roles in elastic fiber formation during development. Fibulin-2 interacts with two major constituents of elastic fibers, tropoelastin and fibrillin-1, in vitro and localizes to elastic fibers in many tissues in vivo. The protein is prominently expressed during morphogenesis of the heart and aortic arch vessels and at early stages of cartilage development. To examine its role in vivo, we generated mice that do not express the fibulin-2 gene (Fbln2) through homologous recombination of embryonic stem cells. Unexpectedly, the fibulin-2-null mice were viable and fertile and did not display gross and anatomical abnormalities. Histological and ultrastructural analyses revealed that elastic fibers assembled normally in the absence of fibulin-2. No compensatory up-regulation of mRNAs for other fibulin members was detected in the aorta and skin tissue. However, in the fibulin-2 null aortae, fibulin-1 immunostaining was increased in the inner elastic lamina, where fibulin-2 preferentially localizes. The results demonstrate that fibulin-2 is not required for mouse development and elastic fiber formation and suggest possible functional redundancy between fibulin-1 and fibulin-2.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Department of Dermatology and Cutaneous Biology Faculty Papers
Notes :
application/pdf
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1051176836
Document Type :
Electronic Resource