Abstract

BackgroundThe GATA-binding factor 6 (Gata6) gene encodes a zinc finger transcription factor that often functions as a key regulator of lineage specification during development. It is the earliest known marker of the primitive endoderm lineage in the mammalian blastocyst. During gastrulation, GATA6 is expressed in early cardiac mesoderm and definitive endoderm progenitors, and is necessary for development of specific mesoderm and endoderm-derived organs including the heart, liver, and pancreas. Furthermore, reactivation or silencing of the Gata6 locus has been associated with certain types of cancer affecting endodermal organs.ResultsWe have generated a Gata6H2B-Venus knock-in reporter mouse allele for the purpose of labeling GATA6-expressing cells with a bright nuclear-localized fluorescent marker that is suitable for live imaging at single-cell resolution.ConclusionsExpression of the Venus reporter was characterized starting from embryonic stem (ES) cells, through mouse embryos and adult animals. The Venus reporter was not expressed in ES cells, but was activated upon endoderm differentiation. Gata6H2B-Venus/H2B-Venus homozygous embryos did not express GATA6 protein and failed to specify the primitive endoderm in the blastocyst. However, null blastocysts continued to express high levels of Venus in the absence of GATA6 protein, suggesting that early Gata6 transcription is independent of GATA6 protein expression. At early post-implantation stages of embryonic development, there was a strong correlation of Venus with endogenous GATA6 protein in endoderm and mesoderm progenitors, then later in the heart, midgut, and hindgut. However, there were discrepancies in reporter versus endogenous protein expression in certain cells, such as the body wall and endocardium. During organogenesis, detection of Venus in specific organs recapitulated known sites of endogenous GATA6 expression, such as in the lung bud epithelium, liver, pancreas, gall bladder, stomach epithelium, and vascular endothelium. In adults, Venus was observed in the lungs, pancreas, liver, gall bladder, ovaries, uterus, bladder, skin, adrenal glands, small intestine and corpus region of the stomach. Overall, Venus fluorescent protein under regulatory control of the Gata6 locus was expressed at levels that were easily visualized directly and could endure live and time-lapse imaging techniques. Venus is co-expressed with endogenous GATA6 throughout development to adulthood, and should provide an invaluable tool for examining the status of the Gata6 locus during development, as well as its silencing or reactivation in cancer or other disease states.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12861-015-0086-5) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • The GATA-binding factor 6 (Gata6) gene encodes a zinc finger transcription factor that often functions as a key regulator of lineage specification during development

  • Gata6H2B-Venus/+ embryonic stem (ES) cells were directed to differentiate towards a primitive endoderm (PrE) fate by transiently overexpressing GATA4-mCherry, making use of a single-copy Tet-ON system for inducible gene expression formed by ColA1TetO-Gata4mCherry/+ and R26M2rtTA/+ alleles present in the background of reporter ES cells [50, 52, 53]

  • Co-expression of GATA-binding factor 6 (GATA6) and Venus was well correlated in the embryo from the pre-implantation blastocyst to gastrulation and early somite stages of development

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Summary

Introduction

The GATA-binding factor 6 (Gata6) gene encodes a zinc finger transcription factor that often functions as a key regulator of lineage specification during development It is the earliest known marker of the primitive endoderm lineage in the mammalian blastocyst. By the mid-blastocyst (64–100 cell) stage, expression of GATA6 in the ICM becomes restricted in a mosaic ‘salt-and-pepper’ pattern [15, 16] and co-localizes with GATA4 [15, 17] At this stage, exclusive enrichment of GATA6 serves as the earliest known determinant of the primitive endoderm (PrE) lineage, which is the precursor to the parietal endoderm (ParE) and visceral endoderm (VE) [18,19,20]. Gata6+/− heterozygotes have delayed PrE specification and a reduction in the number of cells that adopt a PrE fate at the late blastocyst stage [13, 14]

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