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Genetic Analysis of Fin Development in Zebrafish Identifies Furin and Hemicentin1 as Potential Novel Fraser Syndrome Disease Genes

Using forward genetics, we have identified the genes mutated in two classes of zebrafish fin mutants. The mutants of the first class are characterized by defects in embryonic fin morphogenesis, which are due to mutations in a Laminin subunit or an Integrin alpha receptor, respectively. The mutants o...

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Autores principales: Carney, Thomas J., Feitosa, Natália Martins, Sonntag, Carmen, Slanchev, Krasimir, Kluger, Johannes, Kiyozumi, Daiji, Gebauer, Jan M., Coffin Talbot, Jared, Kimmel, Charles B., Sekiguchi, Kiyotoshi, Wagener, Raimund, Schwarz, Heinz, Ingham, Phillip W., Hammerschmidt, Matthias
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2855323/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20419147
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1000907
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author Carney, Thomas J.
Feitosa, Natália Martins
Sonntag, Carmen
Slanchev, Krasimir
Kluger, Johannes
Kiyozumi, Daiji
Gebauer, Jan M.
Coffin Talbot, Jared
Kimmel, Charles B.
Sekiguchi, Kiyotoshi
Wagener, Raimund
Schwarz, Heinz
Ingham, Phillip W.
Hammerschmidt, Matthias
author_facet Carney, Thomas J.
Feitosa, Natália Martins
Sonntag, Carmen
Slanchev, Krasimir
Kluger, Johannes
Kiyozumi, Daiji
Gebauer, Jan M.
Coffin Talbot, Jared
Kimmel, Charles B.
Sekiguchi, Kiyotoshi
Wagener, Raimund
Schwarz, Heinz
Ingham, Phillip W.
Hammerschmidt, Matthias
author_sort Carney, Thomas J.
collection PubMed
description Using forward genetics, we have identified the genes mutated in two classes of zebrafish fin mutants. The mutants of the first class are characterized by defects in embryonic fin morphogenesis, which are due to mutations in a Laminin subunit or an Integrin alpha receptor, respectively. The mutants of the second class display characteristic blistering underneath the basement membrane of the fin epidermis. Three of them are due to mutations in zebrafish orthologues of FRAS1, FREM1, or FREM2, large basement membrane protein encoding genes that are mutated in mouse bleb mutants and in human patients suffering from Fraser Syndrome, a rare congenital condition characterized by syndactyly and cryptophthalmos. Fin blistering in a fourth group of zebrafish mutants is caused by mutations in Hemicentin1 (Hmcn1), another large extracellular matrix protein the function of which in vertebrates was hitherto unknown. Our mutant and dose-dependent interaction data suggest a potential involvement of Hmcn1 in Fraser complex-dependent basement membrane anchorage. Furthermore, we present biochemical and genetic data suggesting a role for the proprotein convertase FurinA in zebrafish fin development and cell surface shedding of Fras1 and Frem2, thereby allowing proper localization of the proteins within the basement membrane of forming fins. Finally, we identify the extracellular matrix protein Fibrillin2 as an indispensable interaction partner of Hmcn1. Thus we have defined a series of zebrafish mutants modelling Fraser Syndrome and have identified several implicated novel genes that might help to further elucidate the mechanisms of basement membrane anchorage and of the disease's aetiology. In addition, the novel genes might prove helpful to unravel the molecular nature of thus far unresolved cases of the human disease.
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spelling pubmed-28553232010-04-23 Genetic Analysis of Fin Development in Zebrafish Identifies Furin and Hemicentin1 as Potential Novel Fraser Syndrome Disease Genes Carney, Thomas J. Feitosa, Natália Martins Sonntag, Carmen Slanchev, Krasimir Kluger, Johannes Kiyozumi, Daiji Gebauer, Jan M. Coffin Talbot, Jared Kimmel, Charles B. Sekiguchi, Kiyotoshi Wagener, Raimund Schwarz, Heinz Ingham, Phillip W. Hammerschmidt, Matthias PLoS Genet Research Article Using forward genetics, we have identified the genes mutated in two classes of zebrafish fin mutants. The mutants of the first class are characterized by defects in embryonic fin morphogenesis, which are due to mutations in a Laminin subunit or an Integrin alpha receptor, respectively. The mutants of the second class display characteristic blistering underneath the basement membrane of the fin epidermis. Three of them are due to mutations in zebrafish orthologues of FRAS1, FREM1, or FREM2, large basement membrane protein encoding genes that are mutated in mouse bleb mutants and in human patients suffering from Fraser Syndrome, a rare congenital condition characterized by syndactyly and cryptophthalmos. Fin blistering in a fourth group of zebrafish mutants is caused by mutations in Hemicentin1 (Hmcn1), another large extracellular matrix protein the function of which in vertebrates was hitherto unknown. Our mutant and dose-dependent interaction data suggest a potential involvement of Hmcn1 in Fraser complex-dependent basement membrane anchorage. Furthermore, we present biochemical and genetic data suggesting a role for the proprotein convertase FurinA in zebrafish fin development and cell surface shedding of Fras1 and Frem2, thereby allowing proper localization of the proteins within the basement membrane of forming fins. Finally, we identify the extracellular matrix protein Fibrillin2 as an indispensable interaction partner of Hmcn1. Thus we have defined a series of zebrafish mutants modelling Fraser Syndrome and have identified several implicated novel genes that might help to further elucidate the mechanisms of basement membrane anchorage and of the disease's aetiology. In addition, the novel genes might prove helpful to unravel the molecular nature of thus far unresolved cases of the human disease. Public Library of Science 2010-04-15 /pmc/articles/PMC2855323/ /pubmed/20419147 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1000907 Text en Carney et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Carney, Thomas J.
Feitosa, Natália Martins
Sonntag, Carmen
Slanchev, Krasimir
Kluger, Johannes
Kiyozumi, Daiji
Gebauer, Jan M.
Coffin Talbot, Jared
Kimmel, Charles B.
Sekiguchi, Kiyotoshi
Wagener, Raimund
Schwarz, Heinz
Ingham, Phillip W.
Hammerschmidt, Matthias
Genetic Analysis of Fin Development in Zebrafish Identifies Furin and Hemicentin1 as Potential Novel Fraser Syndrome Disease Genes
title Genetic Analysis of Fin Development in Zebrafish Identifies Furin and Hemicentin1 as Potential Novel Fraser Syndrome Disease Genes
title_full Genetic Analysis of Fin Development in Zebrafish Identifies Furin and Hemicentin1 as Potential Novel Fraser Syndrome Disease Genes
title_fullStr Genetic Analysis of Fin Development in Zebrafish Identifies Furin and Hemicentin1 as Potential Novel Fraser Syndrome Disease Genes
title_full_unstemmed Genetic Analysis of Fin Development in Zebrafish Identifies Furin and Hemicentin1 as Potential Novel Fraser Syndrome Disease Genes
title_short Genetic Analysis of Fin Development in Zebrafish Identifies Furin and Hemicentin1 as Potential Novel Fraser Syndrome Disease Genes
title_sort genetic analysis of fin development in zebrafish identifies furin and hemicentin1 as potential novel fraser syndrome disease genes
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2855323/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20419147
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1000907
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