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Publication : Conserved and divergent functions of Nfix in skeletal muscle development during vertebrate evolution.

First Author  Pistocchi A Year  2013
Journal  Development Volume  140
Issue  7 Pages  1528-36
PubMed ID  23482488 Mgi Jnum  J:194896
Mgi Id  MGI:5475035 Doi  10.1242/dev.076315
Citation  Pistocchi A, et al. (2013) Conserved and divergent functions of Nfix in skeletal muscle development during vertebrate evolution. Development 140(7):1528-36
abstractText  During mouse skeletal muscle development, the Nfix gene has a pivotal role in regulating fetal-specific transcription. Zebrafish and mice share related programs for muscle development, although zebrafish develops at a much faster rate. In fact, although mouse fetal muscle fibers form after 15 days of development, in fish secondary muscle fibers form by 48 hours post-fertilization in a process that until now has been poorly characterized mechanically. In this work, we studied the zebrafish ortholog Nfix (nfixa) and its role in the proper switch to the secondary myogenic wave. This allowed us to highlight evolutionarily conserved and divergent functions of Nfix. In fact, the knock down of nfixa in zebrafish blocks secondary myogenesis, as in mouse, but also alters primary slow muscle fiber formation. Moreover, whereas Nfix mutant mice are motile, nfixa knockdown zebrafish display impaired motility that probably depends upon disruption of the sarcoplasmic reticulum. We conclude that, during vertebrate evolution, the transcription factor Nfix lost some specific functions, probably as a consequence of the different environment in which teleosts and mammals develop.
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