Bats can be phylogenetically classified into three major groups: pteropodids, rhinolophoids, and yangochiropterans. While rhinolophoids and yangochiropterans are capable of laryngeal echolocation, pteropodids lack this ability. Delicate ear movements are essential for echolocation behavior in bats with laryngeal echolocation. Caudal auricular muscles, especially the cervicoauricularis group, play a critical role in such ear movements. Previously, caudal auricular muscles were studied in three species of bats with laryngeal echolocation, but to our knowledge, there have been no studies on non-laryngeal echolocators, the pteropodids. Here, we describe the gross anatomy of the cervicoauricularis muscles and their innervation in Cynopterus sphinx by using diffusible iodine-based contrast-enhanced computed tomography and 3D reconstructions of immunohistochemically stained serial sections. A previous study on bats with laryngeal echolocation reported that rhinolophoids have four cervicoauricularis muscles and yangochiropterans have three. We observed three cervicoauricularis muscles in the pteropodid C. sphinx. The number of cervicoauricularis muscles and their innervation pattern were comparable to those of non-bat boreoeutherian mammals and yangochiropterans, suggesting that pteropodids, and yangochiropterans maintain the general condition of boreoeutherian mammals and that rhinolophoids have a derived condition. The unique nomenclature had been previously applied to the cervicoauricularis muscles of bats with laryngeal echolocation, but given the commonality between non-bat laurasiatherians and bats, with the exception of rhinolophoids, maintaining the conventional nomenclature (i.e., M. cervicoauricularis superficialis, M. cervicoauricularis medius, and M. cervicoauricularis profundus) is proposed for bats.
Background: Splicing factor 3B subunit 4 (SF3B4) is a causative gene of an acrofacial dysostosis, Nager syndrome. Although in vitro analyses of SF3B4 have proposed multiple noncanonical functions unrelated to splicing, less information is available based on in vivo studies using model animals. Results:We performed expression and functional analyses of Sf3b4 in mice. The mouse Sf3b4 transcripts were found from two-cell stage, and were ubiquitously present during embryogenesis with high expression levels in several tissues such as forming craniofacial bones and brain. In contrast, expression of a pseudogene-like sequence of mouse Sf3b4 (Sf3b4_ps) found by in silico survey was not detected up to embryonic day 10. We generated a Sf3b4 knockout mouse using CRISPR-Cas9 system. The homozygous mutant mouse of Sf3b4 was embryonic lethal. The heterozygous mutant of Sf3b4 mouse (Sf3b4 +/− ) exhibited smaller body size compared to the wild-type from postnatal to adult period, as well as homeotic posteriorization of the vertebral morphology and flattened calvaria. The flattened calvaria appears to be attributable to mild microcephaly due to a lower cell proliferation rate in the forebrain. Conclusions:Our study suggests that Sf3b4 controls anterior-posterior patterning of the axial skeleton and guarantees cell proliferation for forebrain development in mice. K E Y W O R D Shomeotic posteriorization, microcephaly, Nager syndrome, splicing factor Takahiko Yamada and Masaki Takechi contributed equally to this study.
Syndromic craniosynostosis (CS) patients exhibit early, bony fusion of calvarial sutures and cranial synchondroses, resulting in craniofacial dysmorphology. In this study, we chronologically evaluated skull morphology change after abnormal fusion of the sutures and synchondroses in mouse models of syndromic CS for further understanding of the disease. We found fusion of the inter-sphenoid synchondrosis (ISS) in Apert syndrome model mice (Fgfr2 S252W/+ ) around 3 weeks old as seen in Crouzon syndrome model mice (Fgfr2c C342Y/+ ). We then examined ontogenic trajectories of CS mouse models after 3 weeks of age using geometric morphometrics analyses. Antero-ventral growth of the face was affected in Fgfr2 S252W/+ and Fgfr2c C342Y/+ mice, while Saethre-Chotzen syndrome model mice (Twist1 +/− ) did not show the ISS fusion and exhibited a similar growth pattern to that of control littermates. Further analysis revealed that the coronal suture synostosis in the CS mouse models induces only the brachycephalic phenotype as a shared morphological feature. Although previous studies suggest that the fusion of the facial sutures during neonatal period is associated with midface hypoplasia, the present study suggests that the progressive postnatal fusion of the cranial synchondrosis also contributes to craniofacial dysmorphology in mouse models of syndromic CS. These morphological trajectories increase our understanding of the progression of syndromic CS skull growth.
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