Genetic interaction between members of the Vangi family causes neural tube defects in mice

Neural tube defects (NTDs) are very frequent congenital abnormalities in humans. Recently, we have documented independent association of Vangl1 and Vangl2 gene mutations with NTDs. In the Looptail mouse, homozygosity (but not heterozygosity) for loss-of-function alleles at Vangl2 causes the severe N...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2008-03, Vol.105 (9), p.3449
Hauptverfasser: Torban, Elena, Patenaude, Anne-Marie, Leclerc, Severine, Rakowiecki, Staci, Gauthier, Susan, Andelfinger, Gregor, Epstein, Douglas J, Gros, Philippe
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container_title Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS
container_volume 105
creator Torban, Elena
Patenaude, Anne-Marie
Leclerc, Severine
Rakowiecki, Staci
Gauthier, Susan
Andelfinger, Gregor
Epstein, Douglas J
Gros, Philippe
description Neural tube defects (NTDs) are very frequent congenital abnormalities in humans. Recently, we have documented independent association of Vangl1 and Vangl2 gene mutations with NTDs. In the Looptail mouse, homozygosity (but not heterozygosity) for loss-of-function alleles at Vangl2 causes the severe NTD craniorachischisis, whereas heterozygosity for mutant variants of VANGL1 is associated with NTDs in a human cohort of sporadic and familial cases. To understand the role of Vangl1 in normal development, we created a mouse mutant with an inactivating mutation at Vangl1 (Vangl1...). Vangl1 shows a dynamic pattern of expression in the developing neural tube and notochord at the time of neural tube closure. Vangl1... heterozygotes and Vangl1... homozygotes are viable and fertile, although Vangl1... display subtle alterations in polarity of inner hair cells of the cochlea. Remarkably, and as opposed to healthy Vangl1 and Vangl2 heterozygotes, Vangl1...;Vangl2... double heterozygotes show profound developmental defects that include severe craniorachischisis, inner ear defects (disorganization of the stereociliary bundles of hair cells of the organ of Corti), and cardiac abnormality (aberrant right subclavian artery). These results show that genetic interaction between Vangl1 and Vangl2 genes causes neural tube defects and raise the possibility that interaction between individual Vangl genes and other genetic loci and/or environmental factors may additionally contribute to the etiology of NTDs. (ProQuest: ... denotes formulae/symbols omitted.)
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Recently, we have documented independent association of Vangl1 and Vangl2 gene mutations with NTDs. In the Looptail mouse, homozygosity (but not heterozygosity) for loss-of-function alleles at Vangl2 causes the severe NTD craniorachischisis, whereas heterozygosity for mutant variants of VANGL1 is associated with NTDs in a human cohort of sporadic and familial cases. To understand the role of Vangl1 in normal development, we created a mouse mutant with an inactivating mutation at Vangl1 (Vangl1...). Vangl1 shows a dynamic pattern of expression in the developing neural tube and notochord at the time of neural tube closure. Vangl1... heterozygotes and Vangl1... homozygotes are viable and fertile, although Vangl1... display subtle alterations in polarity of inner hair cells of the cochlea. Remarkably, and as opposed to healthy Vangl1 and Vangl2 heterozygotes, Vangl1...;Vangl2... double heterozygotes show profound developmental defects that include severe craniorachischisis, inner ear defects (disorganization of the stereociliary bundles of hair cells of the organ of Corti), and cardiac abnormality (aberrant right subclavian artery). These results show that genetic interaction between Vangl1 and Vangl2 genes causes neural tube defects and raise the possibility that interaction between individual Vangl genes and other genetic loci and/or environmental factors may additionally contribute to the etiology of NTDs. 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subjects Cells
Congenital diseases
Genes
Genetics
Mutation
Rodents
title Genetic interaction between members of the Vangi family causes neural tube defects in mice
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