Literature DB >> 17384148

Cranial muscle defects of Pitx2 mutants result from specification defects in the first branchial arch.

Hung Ping Shih1, Michael K Gross, Chrissa Kioussi.   

Abstract

Pitx2 expression is observed during all states of the myogenic progression in embryonic muscle anlagen and persists in adult muscle. Pitx2 mutant mice form all but a few muscle anlagen. Loss or degeneration in muscle anlagen could generally be attributed to the loss of a muscle attachment site induced by some other aspect of the Pitx2 phenotype. Muscles derived from the first branchial arch were absent, whereas muscles derived from the second branchial arch were merely distorted in Pitx2 mutants at midgestation. Pitx2 was expressed well before, and was required for, initiation of the myogenic progression in the first, but not second, branchial arch mesoderm. Pitx2 was also required for expression of premyoblast specification markers Tbx1, Tcf21, and Msc in the first, but not second, branchial arch. First, but not second, arch mesoderm of Pitx2 mutants failed to enlarge after embryonic day 9.5, well before the onset of the myogenic progression. Thus, Pitx2 contributes to specification of first, but not second, arch mesoderm. The jaw of Pitx2 mutants was vestigial by midgestation, but significant size reductions were observed as early as embryonic day 10.5. The diminutive first branchial arch of mutants could not be explained by loss of mesoderm alone, suggesting that Pitx2 contributes to the earliest specification of jaw itself.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17384148      PMCID: PMC1851590          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0701122104

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  34 in total

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  55 in total

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6.  Musculin and TCF21 coordinate the maintenance of myogenic regulatory factor expression levels during mouse craniofacial development.

Authors:  Natalia Moncaut; Joe W Cross; Christine Siligan; Annette Keith; Kevin Taylor; Peter W J Rigby; Jaime J Carvajal
Journal:  Development       Date:  2012-03       Impact factor: 6.868

Review 7.  Pharyngeal mesoderm development during embryogenesis: implications for both heart and head myogenesis.

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