Publication | Open Access
A Network of Transcription Factors Operates during Early Tooth Morphogenesis
27
Citations
63
References
2013
Year
GeneticsCell CycleGene Regulatory NetworkDental MorphologyOdontologyTranscriptional RegulationCell Cycle RegulatorBone Morphogenic ProteinCell RegulationReceptor Tyrosine KinaseSignaling PathwayCellular Regulatory MechanismEarly Tooth MorphogenesisNeural CrestMorphogenesisTooth DevelopmentGene ExpressionCell BiologyFunctional GenomicsTranscription RegulationCell LineageDevelopmental BiologySignal TransductionOral BiologySystems BiologyMedicineProtein Network
Improving the knowledge of disease-causing genes is a unique challenge in human health. Although it is known that genes causing similar diseases tend to lie close to one another in a network of protein-protein or functional interactions, the identification of these protein-protein networks is difficult to unravel. Here, we show that Msx1, Snail, Lhx6, Lhx8, Sp3, and Lef1 interact in vitro and in vivo, revealing the existence of a novel context-specific protein network. These proteins are all expressed in the neural crest-derived dental mesenchyme and cause tooth agenesis disorder when mutated in mouse and/or human. We also identified an in vivo direct target for Msx1 function, the cyclin D-dependent kinase (CDK) inhibitor p19(ink4d), whose transcription is differentially modulated by the protein network. Considering the important role of p19(ink4d) as a cell cycle regulator, these results provide evidence for the first time of the unique plasticity of the Msx1-dependent network of proteins in conferring differential transcriptional output and in controlling the cell cycle through the regulation of a cyclin D-dependent kinase inhibitor. Collectively, these data reveal a novel protein network operating in the neural crest-derived dental mesenchyme that is relevant for many other areas of developmental and evolutionary biology.
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