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Publication : Constitutively active mutation of ACVR1 in oral epithelium causes submucous cleft palate in mice.

First Author  Noda K Year  2016
Journal  Dev Biol Volume  415
Issue  2 Pages  306-313
PubMed ID  26116174 Mgi Jnum  J:233662
Mgi Id  MGI:5787762 Doi  10.1016/j.ydbio.2015.06.014
Citation  Noda K, et al. (2016) Constitutively active mutation of ACVR1 in oral epithelium causes submucous cleft palate in mice. Dev Biol 415(2):306-13
abstractText  Cleft palate is among the most common human birth defects. Submucous cleft palate (SMCP) is a subgroup of cleft palate, which may be as common as overt cleft palate. Despite the high frequency of SMCP in humans, only recently have several animal models of SMCP begun to provide insight into the mechanisms by which SMCP develops. In this study, we show that enhanced BMP signaling through constitutively active ACVR1 in palatal epithelium causes submucous cleft palate in mice. In these mutant mice, the fusion of both palatal mesenchyme in hard palate, and muscles in soft palate were hampered by epithelial tissue. During palatal fusion, enhanced SMAD-dependent BMP signaling impaired cell death and altered cell proliferation rate in medial edge epithelium (MEE), and resulted in MEE persistence. At the molecular level, downregulation of DeltaNp63, which is crucial for normal palatal fusion, in MEE cells was impaired, leading to a reduction in caspase-3 activation. Our study provides a new insight into the etiology of SMCP caused by augmented BMP signaling.
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