| Literature DB >> 12093383 |
Abstract
SUMMARY: Transcription factors of the T-box family are required both for early cell-fate decisions, such as those necessary for formation of the basic vertebrate body plan, and for differentiation and organogenesis. When mutated, T-box genes give dramatic phenotypes in mouse and zebrafish, and they have been implicated both in fundamentals of limb patterning and in a number of human congenital malformations such as Holt-Oram, ulnar-mammary and DiGeorge syndromes, as well as being amplified in a subset of cancers. Genes encoding members of the T-box family have recently been shown to comprise approximately 0.1% of genomes as diverse as those of nematodes and humans and have been identified in a wide variety of animals from ctenophores (comb jellies) to mammals; they are, however, completely absent from genomes from other organisms (such as the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana).Entities:
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Year: 2002 PMID: 12093383 PMCID: PMC139375 DOI: 10.1186/gb-2002-3-6-reviews3008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Biol ISSN: 1474-7596 Impact factor: 13.583
Mouse and human T-box-containing genes
| Subfamily | Gene | Human Chromosome | Expression | Heterozygous phenotype in human (null phenotype of mouse homolog) | Reference (mutations only) |
| Brachyury | 6 | Primitive streak, tail bud, and notochord | Spinal cord defects (anteroposterior axis defects) | [22-26] | |
| 1 | Pituitary | [49,50] | |||
| T-brain1 | 2 | Cerebral cortex | [51] | ||
| 3 | Trophoblast, early primitive streak, and cerebral cortex | (Early postimplantation failure) | [44,45] | ||
| 17 | Th1 lineage, lung, and spleen (adult) | [52] | |||
| Tbx1 | 22 | Heart and pharyngeal arges | DiGeorge syndrome | [38-40] | |
| 11 | [53] | ||||
| [10] | |||||
| [10] | |||||
| 1 | Craniofacial region and limbs | [54] | |||
| 6 | Heart, somites, and limbs | [55] | |||
| 7 | Heart, eye, ventral neural tube, and limb | [56,57] | |||
| X | Fetus | [21,58] | |||
| Tbx2 | 17 | Limbs and heart | X-linked cleft palate | [59] | |
| 12 | Limbs and heart | Ulnar-mammary syndrome | [31,32] | ||
| 17 | Allantois, hindlimb | [30,60] | |||
| 12 | Forelimb | Holt-Oram syndrome (failure of heart development) | [30,3,35-37] | ||
| Tbx6 | 16 | Primitive streak and tail bud | (Respecification of posterior paraxial mesoderm as neurectoderm) | [60] |
*These sequences have been reported in mouse but not human; the human genes are hypothetical.
Figure 1Ribbon diagram of crystal structures of (a,b) Xenopus Xbra and (c) human TBX3 bound to DNA. Beta strands are depicted in red and alpha helices in (a,b) orange or (c) turquoise. Reproduced with permission from [18,61].
Figure 2Conservation of selected T-box residues and the presence of diagnostic residues for different members of the family. Position 149 is always a lysine in Xbra proteins from different species (blue) but not in other T-box proteins (red). A diagram of Xenopus Xbra is above, showing the relative positions of the DNA-binding domain, the nuclear localization signal, and the transcriptional activation domain.