Affiliation:
1. Center for Human Genetic Research, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02114
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Familial dysautonomia (FD), a devastating hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathy, results from an intronic mutation in the
IKBKAP
gene that disrupts normal mRNA splicing and leads to tissue-specific reduction of
IKBKAP
protein (IKAP) in the nervous system. To better understand the roles of IKAP in vivo, an
Ikbkap
knockout mouse model was created. Results from our study show that ablating
Ikbkap
leads to embryonic lethality, with no homozygous
Ikbkap
knockout (
Ikbkap
−
/
−
) embryos surviving beyond 12.5 days postcoitum. Morphological analyses of the
Ikbkap
−
/
−
conceptus at different stages revealed abnormalities in both the visceral yolk sac and the embryo, including stunted extraembryonic blood vessel formation, delayed entry into midgastrulation, disoriented dorsal primitive neural alignment, and failure to establish the embryonic vascular system. Further, we demonstrate downregulation of several genes that are important for neurulation and vascular development in the
Ikbkap
−
/
−
embryos and show that this correlates with a defect in transcriptional elongation-coupled histone acetylation. Finally, we show that the embryonic lethality resulting from
Ikbkap
ablation can be rescued by a human
IKBKAP
transgene. For the first time, we demonstrate that IKAP is crucial for both vascular and neural development during embryogenesis and that protein function is conserved between mouse and human.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
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