From: Keith Henson (hkhenson@rogers.com)
Date: Fri 18 Jul 2003 - 23:06:38 GMT
Hox: total knockoutRemoving Hox gene functional redundancy reveals
fundamental roles in skeletal formation | By Cathy Holding
The most primitive skeletal pattern consists of ribs projecting from
vertebrae, from the head through to the tail. In mice, ribs are restricted
to the thoracic region, and the axial skeleton consists of seven cervical,
13 thoracic, six lumbar, four sacral, and a variable number of caudal
vertebrae. Hox genes control the patterning of the skeleton, but exactly
how they achieve this has been confused by the redundant function of genes
within the four chromosomal linkage groups, A–D, which arose during
evolution by genomic duplication events. In the July 18 Science, Deneen M.
Wellick and Mario R. Capecchi at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute
clarify our understanding of skeletal development by knocking out each
redundant copy in two of 13 paralogous sets of Hox genes. This reveals that
these genes interact with one another in repressing the basic primitive
skeletal pattern (Science, 301:363-367, July 18, 2003).
http://www.biomedcentral.com/news/20030718/03
Keith Henson
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