Patterning and gastrulation defects caused by the tw18 lethal are due to loss of Ppp2r1a

Author:

Lange Lisette12,Marks Matthias1,Liu Jinhua1,Wittler Lars1,Bauer Hermann1,Piehl Sandra1,Bläß Gabriele1,Timmermann Bernd3,Herrmann Bernhard G.14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Max Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics, Department Developmental Genetics, Ihnestraße 63-73, Berlin 14195, Germany

2. Free University Berlin, Department of Biology, Chemistry and Pharmacy, Takustrasse 3, Berlin 14195, Germany

3. Max Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics, Sequencing Core Facility, Ihnestraße 63-73, Berlin 14195, Germany

4. Charité-University Medicine Berlin, Institute for Medical Genetics, Campus Benjamin Franklin, Hindenburgdamm 30, Berlin 12203, Germany

Abstract

ABSTRACT The mouse t haplotype, a variant 20 cM genomic region on Chromosome 17, harbors 16 embryonic control genes identified by recessive lethal mutations isolated from wild mouse populations. Due to technical constraints so far only one of these, the tw5 lethal, has been cloned and molecularly characterized. Here we report the molecular isolation of the tw18 lethal. Embryos carrying the tw18 lethal die from major gastrulation defects commencing with primitive streak formation at E6.5. We have used transcriptome and marker gene analyses to describe the molecular etiology of the tw18 phenotype. We show that both WNT and Nodal signal transduction are impaired in the mutant epiblast, causing embryonic patterning defects and failure of primitive streak and mesoderm formation. By using a candidate gene approach, gene knockout by homologous recombination and genetic rescue, we have identified the gene causing the tw18 phenotype as Ppp2r1a, encoding the PP2A scaffolding subunit PR65alpha. Our work highlights the importance of phosphatase 2A in embryonic patterning, primitive streak formation, gastrulation, and mesoderm formation downstream of WNT and Nodal signaling.

Funder

Core

Max-Planck-Gesellschaft

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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