|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : A spontaneous mouse mutation, mesenchymal dysplasia (mes), is caused by a deletion of the most C-terminal cytoplasmic domain of patched (ptc).

First Author  Makino S Year  2001
Journal  Dev Biol Volume  239
Issue  1 Pages  95-106
PubMed ID  11784021 Mgi Jnum  J:72380
Mgi Id  MGI:2152606 Doi  10.1006/dbio.2001.0419
Citation  Makino S, et al. (2001) A Spontaneous Mouse Mutation, mesenchymal dysplasia (mes), Is Caused by a Deletion of the Most C-Terminal Cytoplasmic Domain of patched (ptc). Dev Biol 239(1):95-106
abstractText  A recessive mouse mutation, mesenchymal dysplasia (mes), which arose spontaneously on Chromosome 13, causes excess skin, increased body weight, and mild preaxial polydactyly. Fine gene mapping in this study indicated that mes is tightly linked to patched (ptc) that encodes a transmembrane receptor protein for Shh. Molecular characterization of the ptc gene of the mes mutant and an allelism test using a ptc knockout allele (ptc(-)) demonstrated that mes is caused by a deletion of the most C-terminal cytoplasmic domain of the ptc gene. Since mes homozygous embryos exhibit normal spinal cord development as compared with ptc(-) homozygotes, which die around 10 dpc with severe neural tube defects, the C-terminal cytoplasmic domain lost in mes mutation is dispensable for inhibition of Shh signaling in early embryogenesis. However, compound heterozygotes of ptc(-) and mes alleles, which survive up to birth and die neonatally, had increased body weight and exhibited abnormal anteroposterior axis formation of the limb buds. These findings indicate that Ptc is a negative regulator of body weight and ectopic activation of Shh signaling in the anterior mesenchyme of the limb buds, and that the C-terminal cytoplasmic domain of Ptc is involved in its repressive action.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

17 Bio Entities

30 Expression