Abstract

Development of the vertebrate head is a complex and dynamic process, which requires integration of all three germ layers and their derivatives. Of special importance are ectoderm-derived cells that form the cranial placodes, which then differentiate into the cranial ganglia and sensory organs. Critical to a fully functioning head, defects in cranial placode and sensory organ development can result in congenital craniofacial anomalies. In a forward genetic screen aimed at identifying novel regulators of craniofacial development, we discovered an embryonically lethal mouse mutant, snouty, which exhibits malformation of the facial prominences, cranial nerves and vasculature. The snouty mutation was mapped to a single nucleotide change in a ubiquitously expressed gene, Med23, which encodes a subunit of the global transcription co-factor complex, Mediator. Phenotypic analyses revealed that the craniofacial anomalies, particularly of the cranial ganglia, were caused by a failure in the proper specification of cranial placode neuronal precursors. Molecular analyses determined that defects in cranial placode neuronal differentiation in Med23sn/sn mutants were associated with elevated WNT/β-catenin signaling, which can be partially rescued through combined Lrp6 and Wise loss-of-function. Our work therefore reveals a surprisingly tissue specific role for the ubiquitously expressed mediator complex protein Med23 in placode differentiation during cranial ganglia development. This highlights the importance of coupling general transcription to the regulation of WNT signaling during embryogenesis.

Highlights

  • Med23 Regulates Cranial Ganglia Development and eating, facial expression, gathering and transmitting information through the sense organs, as well as regulating heart rate and gut peristalsis

  • Med23 regulates canonical WNT signaling during cranial placode development, the perturbation of which results in defects in cranial ganglia neuronal differentiation

  • Consistent with this model, we demonstrate that genetically modulating WNT signaling in snouty embryos can ameliorate the neuronal defects in cranial ganglia development

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

1% of all live human births exhibit a developmental anomaly, and of those, about one-third affect the head and face. In an unbiased manner, novel genes that play important roles in neural crest, placode and craniofacial development, we performed a three generation forward genetic screen in mice via N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea (ENU) induced mutagenesis (Sandell et al, 2011). From this screen we identified a mouse mutant, which was termed snouty, due to the hypoplastic malformed shape of its frontonasal tissues. Our work has uncovered an important link between the Mediator complex and WNT signaling, which links the general transcription co-factor machinery to modulation of a major highly conserved signaling pathway important in development, tissue homeostasis and disease

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