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Publication : Involvement of Atm and Trp53 in neural cell loss due to Terf2 inactivation during mouse brain development.

First Author  Kim J Year  2017
Journal  Histochem Cell Biol Volume  148
Issue  5 Pages  489-501
PubMed ID  28620865 Mgi Jnum  J:309383
Mgi Id  MGI:6754571 Doi  10.1007/s00418-017-1591-3
Citation  Kim J, et al. (2017) Involvement of Atm and Trp53 in neural cell loss due to Terf2 inactivation during mouse brain development. Histochem Cell Biol 148(5):489-501
abstractText  Maintenance of genomic integrity is one of the critical features for proper neurodevelopment and inhibition of neurological diseases. The signals from both ATM and ATR to TP53 are well-known mechanisms to remove neural cells with DNA damage during neurogenesis. Here we examined the involvement of Atm and Atr in genomic instability due to Terf2 inactivation during mouse brain development. Selective inactivation of Terf2 in neural progenitors induced apoptosis, resulting in a complete loss of the brain structure. This neural loss was rescued partially in both Atm and Trp53 deficiency, but not in an Atr-deficient background in the mouse. Atm inactivation resulted in incomplete brain structures, whereas p53 deficiency led to the formation of multinucleated giant neural cells and the disruption of the brain structure. These giant neural cells disappeared in Lig4 deficiency. These data demonstrate ATM and TP53 are important for the maintenance of telomere homeostasis and the surveillance of telomere dysfunction during neurogenesis.
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