Madrikha D Saturne, Susan M Motch Perrine, Qingyang Li, Joan T Richtsmeier, Ethylin Wang Jabs, Harm van Bakel, Greg Holmes
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Differential regulation of coronal and lambdoid suture patency by PTHLH and HHIP activity in mice.
Craniofacial development depends on the formation of fibrous joints, or sutures, between skull bones. Premature fusion of sutures, or craniosynostosis, is a common human pathology. Ectopic Hedgehog (HH) signaling is one cause of craniosynostosis. Hhip encodes an inhibitor of HH ligands, and we previously identified coronal suture dysgenesis in embryonic Hhip-/- mice, in which suture mesenchyme was depleted between closely opposed but unfused osteogenic fronts at E18.5. Here, we report that the lambdoid suture fuses in Hhip-/- mice by E18.5. RNA-seq analysis of the Hhip-/- coronal and lambdoid sutures show that HH target gene expression, including Pthlh, is upregulated. Paradoxically, expression of Ihh is downregulated. We hypothesized that PTHLH, a negative regulator of Ihh expression, may reduce HH signaling to promote coronal suture patency and prevent fusion of the Hhip-/- coronal suture. We generated Hhip-/-;Pthlh-/- embryos and found that coronal sutures are fusing by E18.5. Our results reveal a previously undescribed role for Pthlh in suture development and demonstrate suture-specific roles for HH inhibitors in maintaining suture patency.
期刊介绍:
Development’s scope covers all aspects of plant and animal development, including stem cell biology and regeneration. The single most important criterion for acceptance in Development is scientific excellence. Research papers (articles and reports) should therefore pose and test a significant hypothesis or address a significant question, and should provide novel perspectives that advance our understanding of development. We also encourage submission of papers that use computational methods or mathematical models to obtain significant new insights into developmental biology topics. Manuscripts that are descriptive in nature will be considered only when they lay important groundwork for a field and/or provide novel resources for understanding developmental processes of broad interest to the community.
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