| Literature DB >> 31417417 |
Woong Y Hwang1, Jonathan Marquez1, Mustafa K Khokha1.
Abstract
Frog model organisms have been appreciated for their utility in exploring physiological phenomena for nearly a century. Now, a vibrant community of biologists that utilize this model organism has poised Xenopus to serve as a high throughput vertebrate organism to model patient-driven genetic diseases. This has facilitated the investigation of effects of patient mutations on specific organs and signaling pathways. This approach promises a rapid investigation into novel mechanisms that disrupt normal organ morphology and function. Considering that many disease states are still interrogated in vitro to determine relevant biological processes for further study, the prospect of interrogating genetic disease in Xenopus in vivo is an attractive alternative. This model may more closely capture important aspects of the pathology under investigation such as cellular micro environments and local forces relevant to a specific organ's development and homeostasis. This review aims to highlight recent methodological advances that allow investigation of genetic disease in organ-specific contexts in Xenopus as well as provide examples of how these methods have led to the identification of novel mechanisms and pathways important for understanding human disease.Entities:
Keywords: Xenopus; birth defects; disease model; gene discovery; genetics of congenital malformations; mechanism discovery; organogenesis
Year: 2019 PMID: 31417417 PMCID: PMC6682594 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2019.00953
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
A subset of mutant lines of interest to disease processes in the National Xenopus Resource Database.
| Pkhd1L | Autosomal Recessive Polycystic Kidney Disease | ||
| pkd2.L | Polycystic Kidney Disease 2 | ||
| wdpcp.L | Bardet-Biedl syndrome (ciliopathic genetic disorder that affects many parts of body including kidney failure) | ||
| eya1.L | Branchio-oto-renal syndrome | ||
| tbx5 | Hold-Oram syndrome (cardiac-limb syndrome) | ||
| gdf1 | Double outlet right ventricle, tetralogy of Fallot, Right atrial isomerism | ||
| Imna | dilated cardiomyopathy | ||
| myh6 | familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, dilated cardiomyopathy, atrial septal defect | ||
FIGURE 1Tools in Xenopus allow for the study of heart and kidney development. Schematic of the organ systems in Xenopus along with available tools to interrogate these systems.
Transgenic lines discussed in this review.
| Tg(nkx2.5:GFP) | Approx. 7.3 kb upstream of transcriptional start site of nkx2.5 (GU573788) fused to GFP. This region should contain the nkx2.5 promoter | Early heart field studies |
| Tg(mlc3:GFP) | 8 kb of promoter of the | Myocardium studies |
| Tg(smad3:eGFP) | 1.5 kb of promoter of the | Endocardium studies |
| Tg(WntREs:dEGFP) | 7 copies of a TCF/LEF1 binding DNA element, a minimal TATA box and a reporter gene encoding destabilized eGFP and a polyA sequence | Wnt signaling in cardiogenesis |
| Tg(Dre.cdhl7:eGFP) | Approximately a 4.3 kb genomic fragment upstream of the Danio rerio cdhl7 driving expression of EGFP | Pronephric development |