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result(s) for
"Bowles, Josephine"
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Human sex reversal is caused by duplication or deletion of core enhancers upstream of SOX9
2018
Disorders of sex development (DSDs) are conditions affecting development of the gonads or genitalia. Variants in two key genes,
SRY
and its target
SOX9
, are an established cause of 46,XY DSD, but the genetic basis of many DSDs remains unknown. SRY-mediated
SOX9
upregulation in the early gonad is crucial for testis development, yet the regulatory elements underlying this have not been identified in humans. Here, we identified four DSD patients with overlapping duplications or deletions upstream of
SOX9
. Bioinformatic analysis identified three putative enhancers for
SOX9
that responded to different combinations of testis-specific regulators. All three enhancers showed synergistic activity and together drive
SOX9
in the testis. This is the first study to identify
SOX9
enhancers that, when duplicated or deleted, result in 46,XX or 46,XY sex reversal, respectively. These enhancers provide a hitherto missing link by which SRY activates
SOX9
in humans, and establish
SOX9
enhancer mutations as a significant cause of DSD.
SRY and its target SOX9 are known key determinants in testis development. Here the authors by studying duplications and deletions upstream of SOX9 from patient samples with disorders of sex development (DSD) reveal enhancers for SOX9 critical for human sex development and DSD.
Journal Article
ALDH1A1 provides a source of meiosis-inducing retinoic acid in mouse fetal ovaries
2016
Substantial evidence exists that during fetal ovarian development in mammals, retinoic acid (RA) induces germ cells to express the pre-meiotic marker
Stra8
and enter meiosis, and that these effects are prevented in the fetal testis by the RA-degrading P450 enzyme CYP26B1. Nonetheless, the role of RA has been disputed principally because germ cells in embryos lacking two major RA-synthesizing enzymes, ALDH1A2 and ALDH1A3, remain able to enter meiosis. Here we show that a third RA-synthesizing enzyme, ALDH1A1, is expressed in fetal ovaries, providing a likely source of RA in the absence of ALDH1A2 and ALDH1A3. In ovaries lacking ALDH1A1, the onset of germ cell meiosis is delayed. Our data resolve the conundrum posed by conflicting published data sets and reconfirm the model that meiosis is triggered by endogenous RA in the developing ovary.
Recent findings have challenged the established concept that retinoic acid (RA) induces foetal germ cells to enter meiosis. Here, Bowles et al. identify the enzyme ALDH1A1 as a source of ovarian RA that may induce meiosis even when other RA-synthetic enzymes are deleted.
Journal Article
Retinoid Signaling Determines Germ Cell Fate in Mice
by
Wilhelm, Dagmar
,
Mamiya, Satoru
,
Koopman, Peter
in
animal ovaries
,
Animal reproduction
,
Animals
2006
Germ cells in the mouse embryo can develop as oocytes or spermatogonia, depending on molecular cues that have not been identified. We found that retinoic acid, produced by mesonephroi of both sexes, causes germ cells in the ovary to enter meiosis and inititate oogenesis. Meiosis is retarded in the fetal testis by the action of the retinoid-degrading enzyme CYP26B1, ultimately leading to spermatogenesis. In testes of Cyp26b1-knockout mouse embryos, germ cells enter meiosis precociously, as if in a normal ovary. Thus, precise regulation of retinoid levels during fetal gonad development provides the molecular control mechanism that specifies germ cell fate.
Journal Article
SOX30 is required for male fertility in mice
by
O’Bryan, Moira K.
,
Koopman, Peter
,
Bowles, Josephine
in
Acrosome - physiology
,
Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing - metabolism
,
Animals
2017
Male infertility is a major and growing problem and, in most cases, the specific root cause is unknown. Here we show that the transcription factor SOX30 plays a critical role in mouse spermatogenesis. Sox30 -null mice are healthy and females are fertile, but males are sterile. In the absence of Sox30 meiosis initiates normally in both sexes but, in males, germ cell development arrests during the post-meiotic round spermatid period. In the mutant testis, acrosome and axoneme development are aberrant, multinucleated germ cells (symplasts) form and round spermatids unable to process beyond step 3 of spermiogenesis. No elongated spermatids nor spermatozoa are produced. Thus, Sox30 represents a rare example of a gene for which loss of function results in a complete arrest of spermatogenesis at the onset of spermiogenesis. Our results suggest that SOX30 mutations may underlie some instances of unexplained non-obstructive azoospermia in humans.
Journal Article
Gene editing of the multi-copy H2A.B gene and its importance for fertility
by
Field, Matt
,
Tremethick, David J.
,
Kurscheid, Sebastian
in
Animal Genetics and Genomics
,
Animals
,
Base Sequence
2019
Background
Altering the biochemical makeup of chromatin by the incorporation of histone variants during development represents a key mechanism in regulating gene expression. The histone variant H2A.B, H2A.B.3 in mice, appeared late in evolution and is most highly expressed in the testis. In the mouse, it is encoded by three different genes. H2A.B expression is spatially and temporally regulated during spermatogenesis being most highly expressed in the haploid round spermatid stage. Active genes gain H2A.B where it directly interacts with polymerase II and RNA processing factors within splicing speckles. However, the importance of H2A.B for gene expression and fertility are unknown.
Results
Here, we report the first mouse knockout of this histone variant and its effects on fertility, nuclear organization, and gene expression. In view of the controversy related to the generation of off-target mutations by gene editing approaches, we test the specificity of TALENs by disrupting the H2A.B multi-copy gene family using only one pair of TALENs. We show that TALENs do display a high level of specificity since no off-target mutations are detected by bioinformatics analyses of exome sequences obtained from three consecutive generations of knockout mice and by Sanger DNA sequencing. Male H2A.B.3 knockout mice are subfertile and display an increase in the proportion of abnormal sperm and clogged seminiferous tubules. Significantly, a loss of proper RNA Pol II targeting to distinct transcription–splicing territories and changes to pre-mRNA splicing are observed.
Conclusion
We have produced the first H2A.B knockout mouse using the TALEN approach.
Journal Article
Sex determination in mammalian germ cells
2015
Germ cells are the precursors of the sperm and oocytes and hence are critical for survival of the species. In mammals, they are specified during fetal life, migrate to the developing gonads and then undergo a critical period during which they are instructed, by the soma, to adopt the appropriate sexual fate. In a fetal ovary, germ cells enter meiosis and commit to oogenesis, whereas in a fetal testis, they avoid entry into meiosis and instead undergo mitotic arrest and mature toward spermatogenesis. Here, we discuss what we know so far about the regulation of sex-specific differentiation of germ cells, considering extrinsic molecular cues produced by somatic cells, as well as critical intrinsic changes within the germ cells. This review focuses almost exclusively on our understanding of these events in the mouse model.
Journal Article
Variants in SART3 cause a spliceosomopathy characterised by failure of testis development and neuronal defects
2023
Squamous cell carcinoma antigen recognized by T cells 3 (
SART3
) is an RNA-binding protein with numerous biological functions including recycling small nuclear RNAs to the spliceosome. Here, we identify recessive variants in
SART3
in nine individuals presenting with intellectual disability, global developmental delay and a subset of brain anomalies, together with gonadal dysgenesis in 46,XY individuals. Knockdown of the
Drosophila
orthologue of
SART3
reveals a conserved role in testicular and neuronal development. Human induced pluripotent stem cells carrying patient variants in
SART3
show disruption to multiple signalling pathways, upregulation of spliceosome components and demonstrate aberrant gonadal and neuronal differentiation in vitro. Collectively, these findings suggest that bi-allelic
SART3
variants underlie a spliceosomopathy which we tentatively propose be termed INDYGON syndrome (
I
ntellectual disability,
N
eurodevelopmental defects and
D
evelopmental delay with 46,X
Y
GON
adal dysgenesis). Our findings will enable additional diagnoses and improved outcomes for individuals born with this condition.
The
SART3
gene encodes an RNA-binding protein critical for spliceosome function. Here, the authors find that bi-allelic variants in
SART3
underlie a congenital condition characterised by neuro-developmental defects and 46,XY gonadal dysgenesis.
Journal Article
Mice Lacking Hbp1 Function Are Viable and Fertile
by
Wilhelm, Dagmar
,
Spiller, Cassy M.
,
Koopman, Peter
in
Alternative splicing
,
Animals
,
Biology and Life Sciences
2017
Fetal germ cell development is tightly regulated by the somatic cell environment, and is characterised by cell cycle states that differ between XY and XX gonads. In the testis, gonocytes enter G.sub.1 /G.sub.0 arrest from 12.5 days post coitum (dpc) in mice and maintain cell cycle arrest until after birth. Failure to correctly maintain G.sub.1 /G.sub.0 arrest can result in loss of germ cells or, conversely, germ cell tumours. High mobility group box containing transcription factor 1 (HBP1) is a transcription factor that was previously identified in fetal male germ cells at the time of embryonic cell cycle arrest. In somatic cells, HBP1 is classified as a tumour suppressor protein, known to regulate proliferation and senescence. We therefore investigated the possible role of HBP1 in the initiation and maintenance of fetal germ cell G.sub.1 /G.sub.0 arrest using the mouse model. We identified two splice variants of Hbp1, both of which are expressed in XY and XX fetal gonads, but only one of which is localised to the nucleus in in vitro assays. To investigate Hbp1 loss of function, we used embryonic stem (ES) cells carrying a Genetrap mutation for Hbp1 to generate mice lacking Hbp1 function. We found that Hbp1-genetrap mouse mutant germ cells proliferated correctly throughout development, and adult males were viable and fertile. Multiple Hbp1-LacZ reporter mouse lines were generated, unexpectedly revealing Hbp1 embryonic expression in hair follicles, eye and limbs. Lastly, in a model of defective germ cell G.sub.1 /G.sub.0 arrest, the Rb1-knockout model, we found no evidence for Hbp1 mis-regulation, suggesting that the reported RB1-HBP1 interaction is not critical in the germline, despite co-expression.
Journal Article
Rapid Screening of Gene Function by Systemic Delivery of Morpholino Oligonucleotides to Live Mouse Embryos
by
McClelland, Kathryn S.
,
Koopman, Peter
,
Wainwright, Elanor N.
in
ADAM Proteins - genetics
,
ADAM Proteins - metabolism
,
Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing - genetics
2015
Traditional gene targeting methods in mice are complex and time consuming, especially when conditional deletion methods are required. Here, we describe a novel technique for assessing gene function by injection of modified antisense morpholino oligonucleotides (MOs) into the heart of mid-gestation mouse embryos. After allowing MOs to circulate through the embryonic vasculature, target tissues were explanted, cultured and analysed for expression of key markers. We established proof-of-principle by partially phenocopying known gene knockout phenotypes in the fetal gonads (Stra8, Sox9) and pancreas (Sox9). We also generated a novel double knockdown of Gli1 and Gli2, revealing defects in Leydig cell differentiation in the fetal testis. Finally, we gained insight into the roles of Adamts19 and Ctrb1, genes of unknown function in sex determination and gonadal development. These studies reveal the utility of this method as a means of first-pass analysis of gene function during organogenesis before committing to detailed genetic analysis.
Journal Article
A Site-Specific, Single-Copy Transgenesis Strategy to Identify 5′ Regulatory Sequences of the Mouse Testis-Determining Gene Sry
by
Quinn, Alexander
,
Ng, Ee Ting
,
Koopman, Peter
in
Aberration
,
Animals
,
Biology and life sciences
2014
The Y-chromosomal gene SRY acts as the primary trigger for male sex determination in mammalian embryos. Correct regulation of SRY is critical: aberrant timing or level of Sry expression is known to disrupt testis development in mice and we hypothesize that mutations that affect regulation of human SRY may account for some of the many cases of XY gonadal dysgenesis that currently remain unexplained. However, the cis-sequences involved in regulation of Sry have not been identified, precluding a test of this hypothesis. Here, we used a transgenic mouse approach aimed at identifying mouse Sry 5' flanking regulatory sequences within 8 kb of the Sry transcription start site (TSS). To avoid problems associated with conventional pronuclear injection of transgenes, we used a published strategy designed to yield single-copy transgene integration at a defined, transcriptionally open, autosomal locus, Col1a1. None of the Sry transgenes tested was expressed at levels compatible with activation of Sox9 or XX sex reversal. Our findings indicate either that the Col1a1 locus does not provide an appropriate context for the correct expression of Sry transgenes, or that the cis-sequences required for Sry expression in the developing gonads lie beyond 8 kb 5' of the TSS.
Journal Article