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Publication : A molecular basis for retinoic acid-induced axial truncation.

First Author  Iulianella A Year  1999
Journal  Dev Biol Volume  205
Issue  1 Pages  33-48
PubMed ID  9882496 Mgi Jnum  J:52208
Mgi Id  MGI:1328639 Doi  10.1006/dbio.1998.9110
Citation  Iulianella A, et al. (1999) A molecular basis for retinoic acid-induced axial truncation. Dev Biol 205(1):33-48
abstractText  Dietary deprivation and gene disruption studies clearly demonstrate that biologically active retinoids, such as retinoic acid (RA), are essential for numerous developmental programs. Similar ontogenic processes are also affected by retinoic acid excess, suggesting that the effects of retinoid administration reflect normal retinoid- dependent events. In the mouse, exogenous retinoic acid can induce both anterior (anencephaly, exencephaly) and posterior (spina bifida) neural tube defects depending on the developmental stage of treatment. Retinoic acid receptor gamma (RAR gamma) mediates these effects on the caudal neural tube at 8.5 days postcoitum, as RAR gamma(-/- ) mice are completely resistant to spina bifida induced by retinoic acid at this stage. We therefore used this null mouse as a model to examine the molecular nature of retinoid-induced caudal neural tube defects by using a panel of informative markers and comparing their expression between retinoic acid-treated wild-type and RAR gamma(-/-) embryos. Our findings indicate that treatment of wild-type embryos led to a rapid and significant decrease in the caudal expression of all mesodermal markers examined (e.g., brachyury, wnt-3a, cdx-4), whereas somite, neuroepithelial, notochord, floorplate, and hindgut markers were unaffected. RAR gamma(-/-) mutants exhibited normal expression patterns for all markers examined, consistent with the notion that mesodermal defects underlie the etiology of retinoid-induced spina bifida. We also found that posterior semitic, but not caudal presomitic, embryonic tissues contained detectable bioactive retinoids, an observation which correlated with the ability of caudal explants to rapidly clear exogenous RA. Interestingly, transcripts encoding mP450RAI, a cytochrome P450, the product of which is believed to catabolize retinoic acid, were abundant in the retinoid- poor region of the caudal embryo, mP450RAI was rapidly induced by retinoic acid treatment in vivo, consistent with previous studies suggesting that it plays a critical role in retinoid signaling. These data suggest that nascent mesoderm is highly sensitive to retinoic acid and that mP450RAI serves to tightly regulate retinoid levels in the caudal embryo. These findings also raise the possibility that RA may play a role in the generation of posterior mesoderm derivatives in part by affecting brachyury expression. (C) 1999 Academic Press.
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