|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Deletion of a remote enhancer near ATOH7 disrupts retinal neurogenesis, causing NCRNA disease.

First Author  Ghiasvand NM Year  2011
Journal  Nat Neurosci Volume  14
Issue  5 Pages  578-86
PubMed ID  21441919 Mgi Jnum  J:176194
Mgi Id  MGI:5288596 Doi  10.1038/nn.2798
Citation  Ghiasvand NM, et al. (2011) Deletion of a remote enhancer near ATOH7 disrupts retinal neurogenesis, causing NCRNA disease. Nat Neurosci 14(5):578-86
abstractText  Individuals with nonsyndromic congenital retinal nonattachment (NCRNA) are totally blind from birth. The disease afflicts approximately 1% of Kurdish people living in a group of neighboring villages in North Khorasan, Iran. We found that NCRNA is caused by a 6,523-bp deletion that spans a remote cis regulatory element 20 kb upstream from ATOH7 (Math5), a bHLH transcription factor gene that is required for retinal ganglion cell (RGC) and optic nerve development. In humans, the absence of RGCs stimulates massive neovascular growth of fetal blood vessels in the vitreous and early retinal detachment. The remote ATOH7 element appears to act as a secondary or 'shadow' transcriptional enhancer. It has minimal sequence similarity to the primary enhancer, which is close to the ATOH7 promoter, but drives transgene expression with an identical spatiotemporal pattern in the mouse retina. The human transgene also functions appropriately in zebrafish, reflecting deep evolutionary conservation. These dual enhancers may reinforce ATOH7 expression during early critical stages of eye development when retinal neurogenesis is initiated.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

7 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

15 Expression

Trail: Publication