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Publication : Foxa2 is required for transition to air breathing at birth.

First Author  Wan H Year  2004
Journal  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Volume  101
Issue  40 Pages  14449-54
PubMed ID  15452354 Mgi Jnum  J:93473
Mgi Id  MGI:3057095 Doi  10.1073/pnas.0404424101
Citation  Wan H, et al. (2004) Foxa2 is required for transition to air breathing at birth. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 101(40):14449-54
abstractText  Toward the end of gestation in mammals, the fetal lung undergoes a process of differentiation that is required for transition to air breathing at birth. Respiratory epithelial cells synthesize the surfactant proteins and lipids that together form the pulmonary surfactant complex necessary for lung function. Failure of this process causes respiratory distress syndrome, a leading cause of perinatal death and morbidity in newborn infants. Here we demonstrate that expression of the forkhead gene Foxa2 in respiratory epithelial cells of the peripheral lung controls pulmonary maturation at birth. Newborn mice lacking Foxa2 expression in the lung develop severe pulmonary disease on the first day of life, with all of the morphological, molecular, and biochemical features of respiratory distress syndrome in preterm infants, including atelectasis, hyaline membranes, and the lack of pulmonary surfactant lipids and proteins. RNA microarray analysis at embryonic day 18.5 demonstrated that Foxa2-regulated expression of a group of genes mediating surfactant protein and lipid synthesis, host defense, and antioxidant production. Foxa2 regulates a complex pulmonary program of epithelial cell maturation required for transition to air breathing at birth.
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