|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Control of stomach smooth muscle development and intestinal rotation by transcription factor BARX1.

First Author  Jayewickreme CD Year  2015
Journal  Dev Biol Volume  405
Issue  1 Pages  21-32
PubMed ID  26057579 Mgi Jnum  J:225747
Mgi Id  MGI:5694301 Doi  10.1016/j.ydbio.2015.05.024
Citation  Jayewickreme CD, et al. (2015) Control of stomach smooth muscle development and intestinal rotation by transcription factor BARX1. Dev Biol 405(1):21-32
abstractText  Diverse functions of the homeodomain transcription factor BARX1 include Wnt-dependent, non-cell autonomous specification of the stomach epithelium, tracheo-bronchial septation, and Wnt-independent expansion of the spleen primordium. Tight spatio-temporal regulation of Barx1 levels in the mesentery and stomach mesenchyme suggests additional roles. To determine these functions, we forced constitutive BARX1 expression in the Bapx1 expression domain, which includes the mesentery and intestinal mesenchyme, and also examined Barx1(-/)(-) embryos in further detail. Transgenic embryos invariably showed intestinal truncation and malrotation, in part reflecting abnormal left-right patterning. Ectopic BARX1 expression did not affect intestinal epithelium, but intestinal smooth muscle developed with features typical of the stomach wall. BARX1, which is normally restricted to the developing stomach, drives robust smooth muscle expansion in this organ by promoting proliferation of myogenic progenitors at the expense of other sub-epithelial cells. Undifferentiated embryonic stomach and intestinal mesenchyme showed modest differences in mRNA expression and BARX1 was sufficient to induce much of the stomach profile in intestinal cells. However, limited binding at cis-regulatory sites implies that BARX1 may act principally through other transcription factors. Genes expressed ectopically in BARX1(+) intestinal mesenchyme and reduced in Barx1(-/-) stomach mesenchyme include Isl1, Pitx1, Six2 and Pitx2, transcription factors known to control left-right patterning and influence smooth muscle development. The sum of evidence suggests that potent BARX1 functions in intestinal rotation and stomach myogenesis occur through this small group of intermediary transcription factors.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

37 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

125 Expression

Trail: Publication