Depletion of definitive gut endoderm in Sox17 -null mutant mice
Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Medical Science · The University of Tokyo · +1 more institution
Abstract
In the mouse, the definitive endoderm is derived from the epiblast during gastrulation, and, at the early organogenesis stage, forms the primitive gut tube, which gives rise to the digestive tract, liver, pancreas and associated visceral organs. The transcription factors, Sox17 (a Sry-related HMG box factor) and its upstream factors, Mixer (homeobox factor) and Casanova (a novel Sox factor), have been shown to function as endoderm determinants in Xenopus and zebrafish, respectively. However, whether the mammalian orthologues of these genes are also involved with endoderm formation is not known. We show that Sox17–/– mutant embryos are deficient of gut endoderm. The earliest recognisable defect is the reduced…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 7.25
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 80
Authors
11- MKMasami Kanai‐AzumaCorresponding
Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Medical Science, The University of Tokyo
- YKYoshiakira Kanai
The University of Tokyo
- JMJacqueline M. Gad
Children's Medical Research Institute
- YTYouichi Tajima
Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Medical Science
- CTChoji Taya
Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Medical Science
Topics & keywords
- Endoderm
- Biology
- Foregut
- Gastrulation
- Hindgut
- Mesoderm
- Cell biology
- Blastula