A striking example of the relationship between regulation of transcription and phenotype is the central role of the Y-chromosomal gene Sry in mammalian sex determination. Sry is the founding member of a large family of so-called Sox genes. During murine embryogenesis, the transcriptional activator Sox-4 is expressed at several sites, but in adult mice expression is restricted to immature B and T lymphocytes. Using targeted gene distruption, we have found that SOX-4(-/-) embryos succumb to circulatory failure at day E14. This was a result of impaired development of the endocardial ridges (a specific site of Sox-4 expression) into the semilunar valves and the outlet portion of the muscular ventricular septum. The observed range of septation defects is known as 'common arterial trunk' in man. We studied haemopoiesis in lethally irradiated mice reconstituted with SOX-4(-/-) fetal liver cells and found that a specific block occurred in B-cell development at the pro-B cell stage. In line with this, the frequency and proliferative capacity of IL-7-responsive B cell progenitors in fetal liver were severely decreased in vitro.
Cell division in Escherichia coli requires the products of the ftsQ, ftsA and ftsZ genes. It is not known how the cell regulates the cellular concentrations of these essential elements of the division system. We describe here a factor that activates cell division by specifically increasing transcription from one of the two promoters that lie immediately upstream of the ftsQAZ gene cluster. The trans‐acting factor is the product of the sdiA gene, which was isolated on the basis of its ability to suppress the division inhibitory effect of the MinC/MinD division inhibitor. In addition, the sdiA gene product suppressed the action of other chromosomally encoded division inhibitors, induced minicell formation in wild type cells, and restored division activity to an ftsZ temperature‐sensitive mutant grown under nonpermissive conditions. All of these properties were explained by the ability of the sdiA gene product specifically to increase transcription of the ftsQAZ gene cluster, resulting in an increase in cellular concentration of the FtsZ protein. The sdiA gene product is the first factor thus far identified that specifically regulates expression of this key group of cell division genes.
During development fast-contracting atrial and ventricular chambers develop from a peristaltic-contracting heart tube. This study addresses the question of whether chamber formation is paralleled by a matching expression of the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca(2+) pump. We studied indo-1 Ca(2+) transients elicited by field stimulation of linear heart tube stages and of explants from atria and outflow tracts of the prototypical preseptational E13 rat heart. Ca(2+) transients of H/H 11+ chicken hearts, which constitute the prototypic linear heart tube stage, were sensitive to verapamil only, indicating a minor contribution of Ca(2+)-triggered SR Ca(2+) release. Outflow tract transients displayed sensitivity to the inhibitors similar to that of the linear heart tube stages. Atrial Ca(2+) transients disappeared upon addition of ryanodine, tetracaine, or verapamil, indicating the presence of Ca(2+)-triggered SR Ca(2+) release. Quantitative radioactive in situ hybridization on sections of E13 rat hearts showed approximately 10-fold higher SERCA2a mRNA levels in the atria compared to nonmyocardial tissue and approximately 5-fold higher expression in compact ventricular myocardium. The myocardium of atrioventricular canal, outflow tract, inner curvature, and ventricular trabecules displayed weak expression. Immunohistochemistry on sections of rat and human embryos showed a similar pattern. The significance of these findings is threefold. (i) A functional SR is present long before birth. (ii) SR development is concomitant with cardiac chamber development, explaining regional differences in cardiac function. (iii) The pattern of SERCA2a expression underscores a manner of chamber development by differentiation at the outer curvature, rather than by segmentation of the linear heart tube.
We studied the distribution of the mRNAs for carbamoylphosphate synthetase (ammonia) and glutamine synthetase in frozen sections of adult rat liver by in situ hybridization to [35S]-labeled cDNA probes. The density of silver grains resulting from hybridization to the labeled cDNA probe for carbamoylphosphate synthetase is highest around the portal venules, decreases towards the central venule, and is virtually absent from an area two to three cells wide that lines the central venules in which mRNA for glutamine synthetase is predominantly localized. Therefore, both mRNAs show the same complementary distribution within the liver acinus that was found for the proteins they encode, demonstrating that compartmentalization of the expression of these enzymes is controlled at a pretranslational level. In addition, we found that carbamoylphosphate synthetase mRNA is present mainly in the epithelium of the crypts of the proximal part of the small intestine, whereas carbamoylphosphate synthetase protein is present in the epithelium of both crypts and villi.
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