Genes Responsible for Maintaining Embryonic Developmental Potential

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Title Genes Responsible for Maintaining Embryonic Developmental Potential
Creator Cairns, B.R.
Subject Diffusion of Innovation; Oocytes; Zygote; Cleavage Stage, Ovum; Blastocyst; Placenta; Cell Lineage; Embryonic Development; Homeodomain Proteins; Gene Expression Regulation; Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental; Transcription Factors; Homeodomain Proteins; Transcriptome; Mice, Transgenic; Mouse Embryonic Stem Cells; Muscular Dystrophy, Facioscapulohumeral; Knowledge Discovery
Keyword Health and Disease
Image Caption Discovery of Dux/DUX4 as a major driver of cleavage-stage genes and processes in mammalian embryos.
Description A major question concerning early embryos involves how early cleavage-stage (two-cell) embryos establish unlimited developmental potential - termed totipotency. Cairns and colleagues identified the multicopy retrogene, DUX4 in humans or Dux in mice, as a transcription factor that is turned on in very early embryos and activates hundreds of genes and retroviral elements during cleavage stage. Remarkably, the expression of Dux efficiently converts mouse embryonic stem cells into 2-cell-embryo-like cells (2CLC) with expanded developmental potential. Interestingly, these 2CLC can contribute to either embryonic or extra-embryonic (trophectoderm/placenta) cell lineages. Thus, Dux-family proteins appear to play essential roles in determining developmental potential in early embryos. The improper expression of DUX4 underlies the common muscle disease facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD), and the results from this work provide important and novel information on the typical role of DUX4 that can now be explored in the context of FSHD.
Relation is Part of 2017
Publisher Spencer S. Eccles Health Sciences Library, University of Utah
Date Digital 2020
Date 2017
Type Image
Format image/jpeg
Rights Management Copyright © 2021, University of Utah, All Rights Reserved
Language eng
ARK ark:/87278/s6zw790j
References 1.) Conserved roles of mouse DUX and human DUX4 in activating cleavage-stage genes and MERVL/HERVL retrotransposons. Hendrickson PG, Doráis JA, Grow EJ, Whiddon JL, Lim JW, Wike CL, Weaver BD, Pflueger C, Emery BR, Wilcox AL, Nix DA, Peterson CM, Tapscott SJ, Carrell DT, Cairns BR. Nat Genet. 2017 Jun;49(6):925. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28459457/
Setname ehsl_50disc
ID 1589386
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6zw790j
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