Absence of radius and ulna in mice lacking hoxa-11 andhoxd-11
- 1 June 1995
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 375 (6534) , 791-795
- https://doi.org/10.1038/375791a0
Abstract
Mice with targeted disruptions in Hox genes have been generated to evaluate the role of the Hox complex in determining the mammalian body plan. This complex of 38 genes encodes transcription factors that specify regional information along the embryonic axes. Early in vertebrate evolution an ancestral complex shared with invertebrates was duplicated twice to give rise to the four linkage groups (Hox A, B, C and D). As a consequence, corresponding genes on the separate linkage groups, called paralogues, are most closely related to each other. Based on sequence similarities, the Hox genes have been subdivided into 13 paralogous groups. The five most 5' groups (Hox 9-13) pattern the posterior region of the vertebrate embryo and the appendicular skeleton. Mice with individual mutations in the paralogous genes hoxa-11 and hoxd-11 have been described. By breeding these two strains together we have generated double mutants which have dramatic phenotypes not apparent in mice homozygous for the individual mutations. The radius and the ulna of the forelimb are almost entirely eliminated, the axial skeleton shows homeotic transformations, and there are severe kidney defects not present in either single mutant. The limb and axial phenotypes are quantitative: as more mutant alleles are added to the genotype, the phenotype becomes progressively more severe. The appendicular skeleton defects suggest that paralogous Hox genes function together to specify limb outgrowth and patterning along the proximodistal axis.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- EVOLUTION OF HOX GENESAnnual Review of Genetics, 1994
- Targeted Gene ReplacementScientific American, 1994
- Targeted misexpression of Hox-4.6 in the avian limb bud causes apparent homeotic transformationsNature, 1992
- Homeobox genes and pattern formation in the vertebrate limbDevelopmental Biology, 1992
- The vertebrate limb: A model system to study the Hox/hom gene network during development and evolutionBioEssays, 1992
- HOX-4 genes and the morphogenesis of mammalian genitalia.Genes & Development, 1991
- Homeobox gene expression correlated with the bifurcation process of limb cartilage developmentNature, 1991
- Patterning in the vertebrate limbCurrent Opinion in Genetics & Development, 1991
- Expression of the homeobox Hox-4 genes and the specification of position in chick wing developmentNature, 1991
- Coordinate expression of the murine Hox-5 complex homoeobox-containing genes during limb pattern formationNature, 1989