TBX1 is the major candidate gene for DiGeorge syndrome (DGS). Mouse studies have shown that the Tbx1 gene is haploinsufficient, as expected for a DGS candidate gene, and that it is required for the development of pharyngeal arches and pouches, as predicted by the DGS clinical phenotype. However, a detailed analysis of the cardiovascular phenotype associated with Tbx1 mutations has not been reported. Here we show that Tbx1 deficiency causes a number of distinct vascular and heart defects, suggesting multiple roles in cardiovascular development - specifically formation and growth of the pharyngeal arch arteries, growth and septation of the outflow tract of the heart, interventricular septation, and conal alignment. Comparison of phenotype and gene expression using a Tbx1-lacZ reporter allele supports a cell-autonomous function in the growth of the pharyngeal apparatus, and a cell non-autonomous function in the growth and early remodeling of the pharyngeal arch arteries. Our data do not support a direct role of neural crest cells in the pathogenesis of the Tbx1 mutant phenotype; however, these cells, and the cranial nerves, are misdirected. We hypothesize that this is due to the lack of a guidance role from the pouch endoderm, which is missing in these mutants.
The mammary gland epithelium comprises two major cell types: basal and luminal. Basal cells interact directly with the extracellular matrix (ECM) and express higher levels of the ECM receptors, integrins, than luminal cells. We show that deletion of beta1 integrin from basal cells abolishes the regenerative potential of the mammary epithelium and affects mammary gland development. The mutant epithelium was characterized by an abnormal ductal branching pattern and aberrant morphogenesis in pregnancy, although at the end of gestation, the secretory alveoli developed from beta1 integrin-positive progenitors. Lack of beta1 integrin altered the orientation of the basal-cell division axis and in mutant epithelium, in contrast to control tissue, the progeny of beta1 integrin-null basal cells, identified by a genetic marker, was found in the luminal compartment. These results reveal, for the first time, the essential role of the basal mammary epithelial cell-ECM interactions mediated by beta1 integrins in the maintenance of a functional stem cell population, mammary morphogenesis and segregation of the two major mammary cell lineages.
Integrins are major extracellular matrix (ECM) receptors that can also serve for some cell-cell interactions. They have been identified as important regulators of mammary epithelial cell growth and differentiation. Their ability to promote cell anchorage, proliferation, survival, migration, and the induction of active ECM-degrading enzymes suggests that they play an essential role in normal mammary morphogenesis, but, on the other hand, reveals their potential to promote tumor progression.
The del22q11 syndrome is associated with a highly variable phenotype despite the uniformity of the chromosomal deletion that causes the disease in most patients. Df1͞؉ mice, which model del22q11, present with reduced penetrance of cardiovascular defects similar to those seen in deleted patients but not with other del22q11-like findings. The reduced penetrance of cardiovascular defects is caused by the ability of mutant embryos to recover from a fourth pharyngeal arch artery growth abnormality that is fully penetrant in early embryos. Here we show that genetic background has a major effect on penetrance of cardiovascular defects by affecting this embryonic recovery process. This effect could not be explained by allelic variation at the haploid locus, and it is likely to be caused by genetic modifiers elsewhere in the genome. We also show that genetic factors control extension of the Df1͞؉ phenotype to include thymic and parathyroid anomalies, establishing the Df1 mouse as a model for the genetic analysis of three major features of human del22q11 syndrome. We found that in Df1͞؉ mice, as in human patients, expression of the heart and thymic phenotypes are essentially independent from each other, suggesting that they may be controlled by different genetic modifiers. These data provide a framework for our understanding of phenotypic variability in patients with del22q11 syndrome and the tools for its genetic dissection.
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