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Publication : Deficiency of the cytoskeletal protein SPECC1L leads to oblique facial clefting.

First Author  Saadi I Year  2011
Journal  Am J Hum Genet Volume  89
Issue  1 Pages  44-55
PubMed ID  21703590 Mgi Jnum  J:186807
Mgi Id  MGI:5433266 Doi  10.1016/j.ajhg.2011.05.023
Citation  Saadi I, et al. (2011) Deficiency of the cytoskeletal protein SPECC1L leads to oblique facial clefting. Am J Hum Genet 89(1):44-55
abstractText  Genetic mutations responsible for oblique facial clefts (ObFC), a unique class of facial malformations, are largely unknown. We show that loss-of-function mutations in SPECC1L are pathogenic for this human developmental disorder and that SPECC1L is a critical organizer of vertebrate facial morphogenesis. During murine embryogenesis, Specc1l is expressed in cell populations of the developing facial primordial, which proliferate and fuse to form the face. In zebrafish, knockdown of a SPECC1L homolog produces a faceless phenotype with loss of jaw and facial structures, and knockdown in Drosophila phenocopies mutants in the integrin signaling pathway that exhibit cell-migration and -adhesion defects. Furthermore, in mammalian cells, SPECC1L colocalizes with both tubulin and actin, and its deficiency results in defective actin-cytoskeleton reorganization, as well as abnormal cell adhesion and migration. Collectively, these data demonstrate that SPECC1L functions in actin-cytoskeleton reorganization and is required for proper facial morphogenesis.
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