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Foxl2 functions in sex determination and histogenesis throughout mouse ovary development

BACKGROUND: Partial loss of function of the transcription factor FOXL2 leads to premature ovarian failure in women. In animal models, Foxl2 is required for maintenance, and possibly induction, of female sex determination independently of other critical genes, e.g., Rspo1. Here we report expression p...

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Autores principales: Garcia-Ortiz, José Elias, Pelosi, Emanuele, Omari, Shakib, Nedorezov, Timur, Piao, Yulan, Karmazin, Jesse, Uda, Manuela, Cao, Antonio, Cole, Steve W, Forabosco, Antonino, Schlessinger, David, Ottolenghi, Chris
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2711087/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19538736
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-213X-9-36
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author Garcia-Ortiz, José Elias
Pelosi, Emanuele
Omari, Shakib
Nedorezov, Timur
Piao, Yulan
Karmazin, Jesse
Uda, Manuela
Cao, Antonio
Cole, Steve W
Forabosco, Antonino
Schlessinger, David
Ottolenghi, Chris
author_facet Garcia-Ortiz, José Elias
Pelosi, Emanuele
Omari, Shakib
Nedorezov, Timur
Piao, Yulan
Karmazin, Jesse
Uda, Manuela
Cao, Antonio
Cole, Steve W
Forabosco, Antonino
Schlessinger, David
Ottolenghi, Chris
author_sort Garcia-Ortiz, José Elias
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Partial loss of function of the transcription factor FOXL2 leads to premature ovarian failure in women. In animal models, Foxl2 is required for maintenance, and possibly induction, of female sex determination independently of other critical genes, e.g., Rspo1. Here we report expression profiling of mouse ovaries that lack Foxl2 alone or in combination with Wnt4 or Kit/c-Kit. RESULTS: Following Foxl2 loss, early testis genes (including Inhbb, Dhh, and Sox9) and several novel ovarian genes were consistently dysregulated during embryonic development. In the absence of Foxl2, expression changes affecting a large fraction of pathways were opposite those observed in Wnt4-null ovaries, reinforcing the notion that these genes have complementary actions in ovary development. Loss of one copy of Foxl2 revealed strong gene dosage sensitivity, with molecular anomalies that were milder but resembled ovaries lacking both Foxl2 alleles. Furthermore, a Foxl2 transgene disrupted embryonic testis differentiation and increased the levels of key female markers. CONCLUSION: The results, including a comprehensive principal component analysis, 1) support the proposal of dose-dependent Foxl2 function and anti-testis action throughout ovary differentiation; and 2) identify candidate genes for roles in sex determination independent of FOXL2 (e.g., the transcription factors IRX3 and ZBTB7C) and in the generation of the ovarian reserve downstream of FOXL2 (e.g., the cadherin-domain protein CLSTN2 and the sphingomyelin synthase SGMS2). The gene inventory is a first step toward the identification of the full range of pathways with partly autonomous roles in ovary development, and thus provides a framework to analyze the genetic bases of female fertility.
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spelling pubmed-27110872009-07-16 Foxl2 functions in sex determination and histogenesis throughout mouse ovary development Garcia-Ortiz, José Elias Pelosi, Emanuele Omari, Shakib Nedorezov, Timur Piao, Yulan Karmazin, Jesse Uda, Manuela Cao, Antonio Cole, Steve W Forabosco, Antonino Schlessinger, David Ottolenghi, Chris BMC Dev Biol Research Article BACKGROUND: Partial loss of function of the transcription factor FOXL2 leads to premature ovarian failure in women. In animal models, Foxl2 is required for maintenance, and possibly induction, of female sex determination independently of other critical genes, e.g., Rspo1. Here we report expression profiling of mouse ovaries that lack Foxl2 alone or in combination with Wnt4 or Kit/c-Kit. RESULTS: Following Foxl2 loss, early testis genes (including Inhbb, Dhh, and Sox9) and several novel ovarian genes were consistently dysregulated during embryonic development. In the absence of Foxl2, expression changes affecting a large fraction of pathways were opposite those observed in Wnt4-null ovaries, reinforcing the notion that these genes have complementary actions in ovary development. Loss of one copy of Foxl2 revealed strong gene dosage sensitivity, with molecular anomalies that were milder but resembled ovaries lacking both Foxl2 alleles. Furthermore, a Foxl2 transgene disrupted embryonic testis differentiation and increased the levels of key female markers. CONCLUSION: The results, including a comprehensive principal component analysis, 1) support the proposal of dose-dependent Foxl2 function and anti-testis action throughout ovary differentiation; and 2) identify candidate genes for roles in sex determination independent of FOXL2 (e.g., the transcription factors IRX3 and ZBTB7C) and in the generation of the ovarian reserve downstream of FOXL2 (e.g., the cadherin-domain protein CLSTN2 and the sphingomyelin synthase SGMS2). The gene inventory is a first step toward the identification of the full range of pathways with partly autonomous roles in ovary development, and thus provides a framework to analyze the genetic bases of female fertility. BioMed Central 2009-06-18 /pmc/articles/PMC2711087/ /pubmed/19538736 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-213X-9-36 Text en Copyright © 2009 Garcia-Ortiz et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Garcia-Ortiz, José Elias
Pelosi, Emanuele
Omari, Shakib
Nedorezov, Timur
Piao, Yulan
Karmazin, Jesse
Uda, Manuela
Cao, Antonio
Cole, Steve W
Forabosco, Antonino
Schlessinger, David
Ottolenghi, Chris
Foxl2 functions in sex determination and histogenesis throughout mouse ovary development
title Foxl2 functions in sex determination and histogenesis throughout mouse ovary development
title_full Foxl2 functions in sex determination and histogenesis throughout mouse ovary development
title_fullStr Foxl2 functions in sex determination and histogenesis throughout mouse ovary development
title_full_unstemmed Foxl2 functions in sex determination and histogenesis throughout mouse ovary development
title_short Foxl2 functions in sex determination and histogenesis throughout mouse ovary development
title_sort foxl2 functions in sex determination and histogenesis throughout mouse ovary development
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2711087/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19538736
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-213X-9-36
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