14 research outputs found
M6 Membrane Protein Plays an Essential Role in Drosophila Oogenesis
We had previously shown that the transmembrane glycoprotein M6a, a member of the proteolipid protein (PLP) family, regulates neurite/filopodium outgrowth, hence, M6a might be involved in neuronal remodeling and differentiation. In this work we focused on M6, the only PLP family member present in Drosophila, and ortholog to M6a. Unexpectedly, we found that decreased expression of M6 leads to female sterility. M6 is expressed in the membrane of the follicular epithelium in ovarioles throughout oogenesis. Phenotypes triggered by M6 downregulation in hypomorphic mutants included egg collapse and egg permeability, thus suggesting M6 involvement in eggshell biosynthesis. In addition, RNAi-mediated M6 knockdown targeted specifically to follicle cells induced an arrest of egg chamber development, revealing that M6 is essential in oogenesis. Interestingly, M6-associated phenotypes evidenced abnormal changes of the follicle cell shape and disrupted follicular epithelium in mid- and late-stage egg chambers. Therefore, we propose that M6 plays a role in follicular epithelium maintenance involving membrane cell remodeling during oogenesis in Drosophila
Dynamics of enhancer chromatin signatures mark the transition from pluripotency to cell specification during embryogenesis
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Comparative epigenomics in distantly related teleost species identifies conserved cis-regulatory nodes active during the vertebrate phylotypic period
The complex relationship between ontogeny and phylogeny has been the subject of attention and controversy since von Baer’s formulations in the 19th century. The classic concept that embryogenesis progresses from clade general features to species-specific characters has often been revisited. It has become accepted that embryos from a clade show maximum morphological similarity at the so-called phylotypic period (i.e., during mid-embryogenesis). According to the hourglass model, body plan conservation would depend on constrained molecular mechanisms operating at this period. More recently, comparative transcriptomic analyses have provided conclusive evidence that such molecular constraints exist. Examining cis-regulatory architecture during the phylotypic period is essential to understand the evolutionary source of body plan stability. Here we compare transcriptomes and key epigenetic marks (H3K4me3 and H3K27ac) from medaka (Oryzias latipes) and zebrafish (Danio rerio), two distantly related teleosts separated by an evolutionary distance of 115-200 Myr. We show that comparison of transcriptome profiles correlates with anatomical similarities and heterochronies observed at the phylotypic stage. Through comparative epigenomics, we uncover a pool of conserved regulatory regions (approximate to 700), which are active during the vertebrate phylotypic period in both species. Moreover, we show that their neighboring genes encode mainly transcription factors with fundamental roles in tissue specification. We postulate that these regulatory regions, active in both teleost genomes, represent key constrained nodes of the gene networks that sustain the vertebrate body plan
Long-range regulatory interactions at the 4q25 atrial fibrillation risk locus involve PITX2c and ENPEP
Background: Recent genome-wide association studies have uncovered
genomic loci that underlie an increased risk for atrial fibrillation,
the major cardiac arrhythmia in humans. The most significant locus is
located in a gene desert at 4q25, approximately 170 kilobases upstream
of PITX2, which codes for a transcription factor involved in embryonic
left-right asymmetry and cardiac development. However, how this genomic
region functionally and structurally relates to PITX2 and atrial
fibrillation is unknown.
Results: To characterise its function, we tested genomic fragments from
4q25 for transcriptional activity in a mouse atrial cardiomyocyte cell
line and in transgenic mouse embryos, identifying a non-tissue-specific
potentiator regulatory element. Chromosome conformation capture revealed
that this region physically interacts with the promoter of the cardiac
specific isoform of Pitx2. Surprisingly, this regulatory region also
interacts with the promoter of the next neighbouring gene, Enpep, which
we show to be expressed in regions of the developing mouse heart
essential for cardiac electrical activity.
Conclusions: Our data suggest that de-regulation of both PITX2 and ENPEP
could contribute to an increased risk of atrial fibrillation in carriers
of disease-associated variants, and show the challenges that we face in
the functional analysis of genome-wide disease associations.We thank Miguel Torres and members of the Manzanares lab for support and
comments; Christine Mummery, Jose Luis de la Pompa and Joaquin
Rodriguez-Leon for reagents; the CNIC Transgenic Unit for generation of
embryos; Stuart Pocock for statistical advice; and Simon Bartlett for
English editing. This study was funded by the CNIC Translational Grant
Programme (CNIC-08-2009 to MM and DF), the Spanish Ministerio de
Economia y Competitividad (grants BFU2011-23083 to MM, BFU2013-41322-P
to JLGS, BFU2012-38111 to AA, and CSD2007-00008 to JLGS and MM), the
Comunidad Autonoma de Madrid (grant CELLDD-CM to MM), and the Andalusian
Government (grant BIO-396 to JLGS). The CNIC is supported by the Spanish
Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad and the Pro-CNIC Foundation.S