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Publication : Embryonic expression of Lim-1, the mouse homolog of Xenopus Xlim-1, suggests a role in lateral mesoderm differentiation and neurogenesis.

First Author  Barnes JD Year  1994
Journal  Dev Biol Volume  161
Issue  1 Pages  168-78
PubMed ID  7904966 Mgi Jnum  J:16971
Mgi Id  MGI:65028 Doi  10.1006/dbio.1994.1018
Citation  Barnes JD, et al. (1994) Embryonic expression of Lim-1, the mouse homolog of Xenopus Xlim-1, suggests a role in lateral mesoderm differentiation and neurogenesis. Dev Biol 161(1):168-78
abstractText  cDNAs encoded by the mouse homolog (Lim-1) of the Xenopus LIM-class homeobox gene Xlim-1 have been isolated from an 8.5-day mouse embryo cDNA library. Nucleotide and deduced amino acid sequences show a high degree of identity with Xlim-1 in the LIM and homeodomains, and 85% identity over the whole protein. An interspecific back-cross has been used to show close linkage of Lim-1 to the endogenous proviral marker Mpmv-4 on mouse chromosome 11. Whole mount in situ hybridization studies have been carried out on mouse embryos between 6.5 and 10.5 days. In mid- to late-streak stage embryos, Lim-1 is expressed in a restricted region of mesoderm in the primitive streak, with the highest level of signal at the anterior. At 7.5 days, transcripts can be seen in a horseshoe-shaped pattern in the periphery of the node, as well as along both sides of the immediately adjacent notochord. In addition, transcripts are present in presumptive lateral and intermediate mesoderm. Later, expression becomes progressively restricted to intermediate mesoderm, the nephrogenic cords, and eventually mesonephric ducts and tubules. By 10.5 days Lim-1 transcripts also appear in restricted regions of the central nervous system (CNS) that are associated with sensory function. The lateral diencephalon, hindbrain, and presumed commissural neurons in the dorsal spinal cord all show Lim-1 expression. In the adult, Lim-1 is expressed in the cerebellum/medulla and kidney, and at very low levels in the cerebrum. These data suggest that in the mouse embryo Lim-1 plays a role in early mesoderm formation and later specification of a differentiated phenotype in subsets of cells of the mesonephros and sensory neurons of the CNS.
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