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Publication : Quaking is essential for blood vessel development.

First Author  Noveroske JK Year  2002
Journal  Genesis Volume  32
Issue  3 Pages  218-30
PubMed ID  11892011 Mgi Jnum  J:75828
Mgi Id  MGI:2177900 Doi  10.1002/gene.10060
Citation  Noveroske JK, et al. (2002) Quaking is essential for blood vessel development. Genesis 32(3):218-30
abstractText  For nearly 40 years functional studies of the mouse quaking gene (qkI) have focused on its role in the postnatal central nervous system during myelination. However, the homozygous lethality of a number of ENU-induced alleles reveals that quaking has a critical role in embryonic development prior to the start of myelination. In this article, we show that quaking has a previously unsuspected and essential role in blood vessel development. Interestingly, we found that quaking, a nonsecreted protein, is expressed in the yolk sac endoderm, adjacent to the mesodermal site of developing blood islands, where the differentiation of blood and endothelial cells first occurs. Antibodies against PE-CAM-1, TIE-2 and SM-alpha-actin reveal that embryos homozygous for the qk(k2) allele have defective yolk sac vascular remodeling and abnormal vessels in the embryo proper at midgestation, coinciding with the timing of embryonic death. However, these mutants exhibit normal expression of Nkx2.5 and alpha-sarcomeric actin, indicating that cardiac muscle differentiation was normal. Further, they had normal embryonic heart rates in culture, suggesting that cardiac function was not compromised at this stage of embryonic development. Together, these results suggest that quaking plays an essential role in vascular development and that the blood vessel defects are the cause of embryonic death. genesis 32:218-230, 2002. Copyright 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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