Abstract

Holoprosencephaly (HPE) is a severe human genetic disease affecting craniofacial development, with an incidence of up to 1/250 human conceptions and 1.3 per 10,000 live births. Mutations in the Sonic Hedgehog (SHH) gene result in HPE in humans and mice, and the Shh pathway is targeted by other mutations that cause HPE. However, at least 12 loci are associated with HPE in humans, suggesting that defects in other pathways contribute to this disease. Although the TGIF1 (TG-interacting factor) gene maps to the HPE4 locus, and heterozygous loss of function TGIF1 mutations are associated with HPE, mouse models have not yet explained how loss of Tgif1 causes HPE. Using a conditional Tgif1 allele, we show that mouse embryos lacking both Tgif1 and the related Tgif2 have HPE-like phenotypes reminiscent of Shh null embryos. Eye and nasal field separation is defective, and forebrain patterning is disrupted in embryos lacking both Tgifs. Early anterior patterning is relatively normal, but expression of Shh is reduced in the forebrain, and Gli3 expression is up-regulated throughout the neural tube. Gli3 acts primarily as an antagonist of Shh function, and the introduction of a heterozygous Gli3 mutation into embryos lacking both Tgif genes partially rescues Shh signaling, nasal field separation, and HPE. Tgif1 and Tgif2 are transcriptional repressors that limit Transforming Growth Factor β/Nodal signaling, and we show that reducing Nodal signaling in embryos lacking both Tgifs reduces the severity of HPE and partially restores the output of Shh signaling. Together, these results support a model in which Tgif function limits Nodal signaling to maintain the appropriate output of the Shh pathway in the forebrain. These data show for the first time that Tgif1 mutation in mouse contributes to HPE pathogenesis and provide evidence that this is due to disruption of the Shh pathway.

Highlights

  • (HPE) is a prevalent human disorder affecting forebrain and craniofacial development, with an incidence of up to 1:250 during embryogenesis, and a high frequency of intrauterine lethality [1,2]

  • We show that Tgif1 mutations in mice cause HPE when combined with a mutation in the closely related Tgif2 gene

  • We show that mutations in Tgif1 and Tgif2 in mice cause HPE by disrupting the Sonic Hedgehog signaling pathway, further emphasizing the importance of this pathway for normal brain development

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Summary

Introduction

(HPE) is a prevalent human disorder affecting forebrain and craniofacial development, with an incidence of up to 1:250 during embryogenesis, and a high frequency of intrauterine lethality [1,2]. Recent estimates of the frequency of HPE live births are as high as 1.3 per 10,000 [3], and many children born with severe HPE phenotypes die soon after birth [4,5]. At least 12 genetic loci have been implicated in HPE by mapping of the minimal chromosomal regions deleted in affected families [10,11,12]. In humans heterozygous SHH loss of function mutations account for 17% of familial HPE and 3.7% of sporadic cases [13,14,15], suggesting a loss of function haploinsufficient phenotype [16,17]. Recent work has shown that Six activates expression of Shh in the forebrain, and in mice Shh and Six mutations synergize to cause HPE, further emphasizing the importance of the Shh pathway [21,22]

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