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Publication : Inhibition of gap junction communication at ectopic Eph/ephrin boundaries underlies craniofrontonasal syndrome.

First Author  Davy A Year  2006
Journal  PLoS Biol Volume  4
Issue  10 Pages  e315
PubMed ID  16968134 Mgi Jnum  J:115952
Mgi Id  MGI:3692498 Doi  10.1371/journal.pbio.0040315
Citation  Davy A, et al. (2006) Inhibition of gap junction communication at ectopic Eph/ephrin boundaries underlies craniofrontonasal syndrome. PLoS Biol 4(10):e315
abstractText  Mutations in X-linked ephrin-B1 in humans cause craniofrontonasal syndrome (CFNS), a disease that affects female patients more severely than males. Sorting of ephrin-B1-positive and -negative cells following X-inactivation has been observed in ephrin-B1(+/-) mice; however, the mechanisms by which mosaic ephrin-B1 expression leads to cell sorting and phenotypic defects remain unknown. Here we show that ephrin-B1(+/-) mice exhibit calvarial defects, a phenotype autonomous to neural crest cells that correlates with cell sorting. We have traced the causes of calvarial defects to impaired differentiation of osteogenic precursors. We show that gap junction communication (GJC) is inhibited at ectopic ephrin boundaries and that ephrin-B1 interacts with connexin43 and regulates its distribution. Moreover, we provide genetic evidence that GJC is implicated in the calvarial defects observed in ephrin-B1(+/-) embryos. Our results uncover a novel role for Eph/ephrins in regulating GJC in vivo and suggest that the pleiotropic defects seen in CFNS patients are due to improper regulation of GJC in affected tissues.
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