Retinaldehyde dehydrogenase 2 and Hoxc8 are required in the murine brachial spinal cord for the specification of Lim1+ motoneurons and the correct distribution of Islet1+ motoneurons
2005
Retinoic acid (RA) activity plays sequential roles during the development
of the ventral spinal cord. Here, we have investigated the functions of local
RA synthesis in the process of motoneuron specification and early
differentiation using a conditional knockout strategy that ablates the
function of the retinaldehyde dehydrogenase 2 (Raldh2) synthesizing enzyme
essentially in brachial motoneurons, and later in mesenchymal cells at the
base of the forelimb. Mutant
( Raldh2 L –/– ) embryos display an
early embryonic loss of a subset of Lim1+ brachial motoneurons, a
mispositioning of Islet1+ neurons and inappropriate axonal projections of one
of the nerves innervating extensor limb muscles, which lead to an adult
forepaw neuromuscular defect. The molecular basis of the
Raldh2 L –/– phenotype relies in part
on the deregulation of Hoxc8, which in turn regulates the RA receptor
RARβ. We further show that Hoxc8 mutant mice, which exhibit a
similar congenital forepaw defect, display at embryonic stages molecular
defects that phenocopy the
Raldh2 L –/– motoneuron
abnormalities. Thus, interdependent RA signaling and Hox gene functions are
required for the specification of brachial motoneurons in the mouse.
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