INHIBITION OF SKIN DEVELOPMENT BY TARGETED EXPRESSION OF A DOMINANT-NEGATIVE RETINOLE ACID RECEPTOR

被引:158
作者
SAITOU, M
SUGAI, S
TANAKA, T
SHIMOUCHI, K
FUCHS, E
NARUMIYA, S
KAKIZUKA, A
机构
[1] KYOTO UNIV,FAC MED,DEPT PHARMACOL,KYOTO 60601,JAPAN
[2] KYOTO UNIV,FAC MED,DEPT DERMATOL,KYOTO 60601,JAPAN
[3] ONO PHARMACEUT,FUKUI INST SAFETY RES,FUKUI 913,JAPAN
[4] UNIV CHICAGO,HOWARD HUGHES MED INST,DEPT MOLEC GENET & CELL BIOL,CHICAGO,IL 60637
关键词
D O I
10.1038/374159a0
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
ALTHOUGH pharmacological doses of retinoic acid (RA) have a wide variety of actions in vivo(1), experimental difficulties have prevented a definitive assignment of its physiological functions, We recently made a dominant-negative retinoic acid receptor (RAR) by a single amino-acid substitution(2) which creates a dominant-negative thyroid hormone receptor(3). The mutated RAR efficiently inhibited the endogenous activities of RARs (alpha, beta, gamma)(2). Thus, targeted expression of the mutated receptor should reveal RA functions during organogenesis by blocking RA signalling in the tissues concerned. To address this possibility, we expressed the dominant-negative RAR in the epidermis, a potential target organ of RA(4). We report here that the resultant transgenic mice exhibited dramatic suppression of epidermal maturation, demonstrating the requirement of RA in normal skin development.
引用
收藏
页码:159 / 162
页数:4
相关论文
共 29 条
[11]   NEW MONOCLONAL-ANTIBODIES RECOGNIZING EPIDERMAL DIFFERENTIATION-ASSOCIATED KERATINS IN FORMALIN-FIXED, PARAFFIN-EMBEDDED TISSUE - KERATIN-10 EXPRESSION IN CARCINOMA OF THE VULVA [J].
IVANYI, D ;
ANSINK, A ;
GROENEVELD, E ;
HAGEMAN, PC ;
MOOI, WJ ;
HEINTZ, APM .
JOURNAL OF PATHOLOGY, 1989, 159 (01) :7-12
[12]   CHROMOSOMAL TRANSLOCATION T(15-17) IN HUMAN ACUTE PROMYELOCYTIC LEUKEMIA FUSES RAR-ALPHA WITH A NOVEL PUTATIVE TRANSCRIPTION FACTOR, PML [J].
KAKIZUKA, A ;
MILLER, WH ;
UMESONO, K ;
WARRELL, RP ;
FRANKEL, SR ;
MURTY, VVVS ;
DMITROVSKY, E ;
EVANS, RM .
CELL, 1991, 66 (04) :663-674
[13]   A MOUSE CDC25 HOMOLOG IS DIFFERENTIALLY AND DEVELOPMENTALLY EXPRESSED [J].
KAKIZUKA, A ;
SEBASTIAN, B ;
BORGMEYER, U ;
HERMANSBORGMEYER, I ;
BOLADO, J ;
HUNTER, T ;
HOEKSTRA, MF ;
EVANS, RM .
GENES & DEVELOPMENT, 1992, 6 (04) :578-590
[14]   THE USE OF RETINOIC ACID TO PROBE THE RELATION BETWEEN HYPERPROLIFERATION-ASSOCIATED KERATINS AND CELL-PROLIFERATION IN NORMAL AND MALIGNANT EPIDERMAL-CELLS [J].
KOPAN, R ;
FUCHS, E .
JOURNAL OF CELL BIOLOGY, 1989, 109 (01) :295-307
[15]   NORMAL DEVELOPMENT AND GROWTH OF MICE CARRYING A TARGETED DISRUPTION OF THE ALPHA-1 RETINOIC ACID RECEPTOR GENE [J].
LI, E ;
SUCOV, HM ;
LEE, KF ;
EVANS, RM ;
JAENISCH, R .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1993, 90 (04) :1590-1594
[16]   FUNCTION OF RETINOIC ACID RECEPTOR-GAMMA IN THE MOUSE [J].
LOHNES, D ;
KASTNER, P ;
DIERICH, A ;
MARK, M ;
LEMEUR, M ;
CHAMBON, P .
CELL, 1993, 73 (04) :643-658
[17]   HIGH POSTNATAL LETHALITY AND TESTIS DEGENERATION IN RETINOIC ACID RECEPTOR-ALPHA MUTANT MICE [J].
LUFKIN, T ;
LOHNES, D ;
MARK, M ;
DIERICH, A ;
GORRY, P ;
GAUB, MP ;
LEMEUR, M ;
CHAMBON, P .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1993, 90 (15) :7225-7229
[18]   GENERATION OF TRANSGENIC MICE WITH ELEVATED BLOOD-PRESSURE BY INTRODUCTION OF THE RAT RENIN AND ANGIOTENSINOGEN GENES [J].
OHKUBO, H ;
KAWAKAMI, H ;
KAKEHI, Y ;
TAKUMI, T ;
ARAI, H ;
YOKOTA, Y ;
IWAI, M ;
TANABE, Y ;
MASU, M ;
HATA, J ;
IWAO, H ;
OKAMOTO, H ;
YOKOYAMA, M ;
NOMURA, T ;
KATSUKI, M ;
NAKANISHI, S .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1990, 87 (13) :5153-5157
[19]   CHARACTERIZATION OF 7 NOVEL MUTATIONS OF THE C-ERBA-BETA GENE IN UNRELATED KINDREDS WITH GENERALIZED THYROID-HORMONE RESISTANCE - EVIDENCE FOR 2 HOT-SPOT REGIONS OF THE LIGAND-BINDING DOMAIN [J].
PARRILLA, R ;
MIXSON, AJ ;
MCPHERSON, JA ;
MCCLASKEY, JH ;
WEINTRAUB, BD .
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION, 1991, 88 (06) :2123-2130
[20]  
Peck Gary L., 1994, P631