6 resultados para BRANCHIAL ARCH ANOMALIES

em DigitalCommons@The Texas Medical Center


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The formation of the vertebrate face is an extremely complex developmental process, which needs to coordinate the outgrowth of several facial primordia. Facial primordia are small buds made up of mesenchymal masses enclosed by an epithelial layer that surrounds the primitive mouth. The upper jaw is formed by the maxillary process, the lateral nasal process, and the frontonasal process while the mandibular process forms the lower jaw. Recent experiments using genetics in mice and bead implantation approaches have shown that the pitx2 homeobox gene and Bmp signaling play important roles in this complex developmental process. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying the function of pitx2 and Bmp in these events are still unclear. Here, we show that pitx2 is required for oral epithelium maintenance, and branchial arch signaling is pitx2 dosage sensitive by using pitx2 allelic combinations that encode varying levels of pitx2. Maintenance of fgf8 signaling requires only low pitx2 dosage while repression of Bmp signaling requires high pitx2 levels. Different incisor and molar phenotypes in low level pitx2 mutant embryos suggest a distinct requirement for pitx2 in tooth-type development. The results show that pitx2 is required for craniofacial muscle formation and expanded Bmp signaling results in excess bone formation in pitx2 mutant embryos. Fate-mapping studies show that ectopic bone results from excessive bone growth, instead of muscle transformation. Moreover, by using cre/loxp system we show that partial loss of Bmpr-IA in the facial primordia results in cleft lip/palate, abnormal teeth, ectopic teeth and tooth transformation. These phenotypes suggest that Bmp signaling has multiple functions during craniofacial development. The mutant palate shelves can fuse with each other when cultured in vitro, suggesting that cleft palate is secondary to the partial loss of Bmpr-IA. Furthermore, we prove that Bmp4, one of the ligands of Bmpr-IA, plays a role during lip fusion developmental process and partial loss of Bmp4 in the facial primordia results in the lip fusion delay. These results have provided insight to understand the complex signaling cascades that regulate craniofacial development. ^

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The heart is the first organ to form in vertebrates during embryogenesis, and its circulatory function is essential to embryonic survival. Cardiac morphogenesis comprises a complex series of interactions involving cells from several embryonic origins. These cell-cell interactions are regulated temporally and spatially by programs of inductive signaling events, including BMP signaling transduced by Smads and left-right asymmetry signaling mediated by Pitx2. Disruptions of BMP signaling and left-right asymmetry signaling result in abnormal cardiac morphogenesis that causes congenital heart disease in humans. In this study, conventional and conditional gene targeting approaches were employed to dissect the functions of Smad8 and Smad1, intracellular BMP signaling transducers, and Pitx2, a direct target of left-right signaling, in cardiac development. We generated the Smad8mt mutant allele and the Smad8lacZ knock-in allele. Smad8 homozygous mutant mice were viable and fertile without obvious abnormalities. The Smad8lacZ knock-in allele showed that Smad8 was expressed in the myocardium of cardiac outflow tract and atrioventricular cushions. We did not find defects in these Smad8-expressing cardiac regions in Smad8mt/mt and Smad8lacZ/lacZ mutants, indicating that Smad8 is dispensable for cardiac development. Conditional knockout of Smad1 using the Nkx2.5Cre allele in cardiac mesoderm resulted in partial inactivation of Smad1 in the myocardium and complete deletion of Smad1 in the epicardium, and caused ventricular hypoplasia featured with a thinner compact zone, suggesting that Smad1 signaling in the epicardium is required for myocardial morphogenesis in ventricles. Previous data have shown that Pitx2 null mutants exhibit defects in the cardiac outflow tract, a region populated with cells from the cardiac mesoderm and the cardiac neural crest. We found that the cardiac neural crest normally populated into the outflow tract in Pitx2 null mutant. Moreover, specific deletion of Pitx2 in the neural crest resulted in normal heart formation. Deletion of Pitx2 in the cardiac mesoderm caused defective outflow tract, revealing that the function of Pitx2 in the cardiac outflow tract resides in splanchnic and branchial arch mesoderm, and is independent of cardiac neural crest cells. ^

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A fundamental task in developmental biology is to understand the molecular mechanisms governing early embryogenesis. The aim of this study was to understand the developmental role of a putative basic helix-loop-helix (b-HLH) transcription factor, twist, during mouse embryogenesis.^ twist was originally identified in Drosophila as one of the zygotic genes, including snail, that were required for dorsal-ventral patterning. In Drosophila embryogenesis, twist is expressed in the cells of the ventral midline destined to form mesoderm. In embryos lacking twist expression, their ventral cells fail to form a ventral furrow and subsequently no mesoderm is formed.^ During mouse embryogenesis, twist is expressed after initial mesoderm formation in both mesoderm and cranial neural crest cell derivatives. To study the role of twist in vivo, twist-null embryos were generated by gene targeting. Embryos homozygous for the twist mutation die at midgestation. The most prominent phenotype in the present study was a failure of the cranial neural tube to close (exencephaly). twist-null embryos also showed defects in head mesenchyme, branchial arches, somites, and limb buds.^ To understand whether twist functions cell-autonomously and to investigate how twist-null cells interact with wild-type cells in vivo, twist chimeras composed of both twist-null and wild-type cells marked by the expression of the lacZgene were generated. Chimeric analysis revealed a correlation between the incidence of exencephaly and the contribution of the underlying twist-null head mesenchyme, thus strongly suggesting that twist-expressing head mesenchyme is required for the closure of the cranial neural tube. These studies have identified twist as a critical regulator for the mesenchymal fate determination within the cranial neural crest lineage. Most strikingly, twist-null head mesenchyme cells were always segregated from wild-type cells, indicating that the twist mutation altered the adhesive specificity of these cells. Furthermore, these results also indicated that twist functions cell-autonomously in the head, arch, and limb mesenchyme but non-cell-autonomously in the somites. Taken together, these studies have established the essential role of twist during mouse embryogenesis. ^

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Congenital anomalies have been a leading cause of infant mortality for the past twenty years in the United States. Few registry-based studies have investigated the mortality experience of infants with congenital anomalies. Therefore, a registry-based mortality study was conducted of 2776 infants from the Texas Birth Defects Registry who were born January 1, 1995 to December 31, 1997, with selected congenital anomalies. Infants were matched to linked birth-infant death files from the Texas Department of Health, Bureau of Vital Statistics. One year Kaplan-Meier survival curves, and mortality estimates were generated for each of the 23 anomalies by maternal race/ethnicity, infant sex, birth weight, gestational age, number of life-threatening anomalies, prenatal diagnosis, hospital of birth and other variables. ^ There were 523 deaths within the first year of life (mortality rate = 191.0 per 1,000 infants). Infants with gastroschisis, trisomy 21, and cleft lip ± palate had the highest first year survival (92.91%, 92.32%, and 87.59%, respectively). Anomalies with the lowest survival were anencephaly (5.13%), trisomy 13 (7.41%), and trisomy 18 (10.29%). ^ Infants born to White, Non-Hispanic women had the highest first year survival (83.57%; 95% CI: 80.91, 85.88), followed by African-Americans (82.43%; 95% CI: 76.98, 86.70) and Hispanics (79.28%; 95% CI: 77.19, 81.21). Infants with birth weights ≥2500 grams and gestational ages ≥37 weeks also had the highest first year survival. First year mortality drastically increased as the number of life-threatening anomalies increased. Mortality was also higher for infants with anomalies that were prenatally diagnosed. Slight differences existed in survival based on infant's place of delivery. ^ In logistic regression analysis, birth weight (<1500 grams: OR = 7.48; 95% CI: 5.42, 10.33; 1500–2499 grams: OR = 3.48; 95% CI: 2.74, 4.42), prenatal diagnosis (OR = 1.92; 95% CI: 1.43, 2.58) and number of life-threatening anomalies (≥3: OR = 22.45; 95% CI: 11.67, 43.18) were the strongest predictors of death within the first year of life for all infants with selected congenital anomalies. To achieve further reduction in the infant mortality rate in the United States, additional research is needed to identify ways to reduce mortality among infants with congenital anomalies. ^